No not true.
1byte = 8bits.
This is the convention followed by all
24 bits/pixel: one byte for red, one byte for green, one byte for blue.
Eight bits are in one byte
8.796 x 10^12 bits
No, a byte is not a group of 10 bits; it is a group of 8 bits. A byte is the standard unit of data used in computing and digital communications, representing 256 different values (from 0 to 255). In contrast, a group of 10 bits would be called a "decabit," which can represent 1,024 different values.
The true answer is yes and no Yes: in binary coded decimal and hexadecimal each byte is 4 bits long; in octal each byte is three bits long. No: in true binary theoretically there is no "last bit".
Generally speaking, eight bits to a byte. There is no actual standard that defines how many bits are in a byte, but it has become something of a de facto standard.
1 byte = 8 bits.
8 Bits = 1 Byte
An octet is 8 bits, which forms a byte.
One byte equals eight bits.
1 Byte is 8 bits
8 bits in one byte