Since 8 bits = 1 byte, yes.
A Mac address is a 48bit addressing scheme (usually represented in HEX). There are 8 bits in a bytes therefore it is 6 bytes long.
A MAC address is typically 48 bits in length, which is equivalent to 6 bytes. Since each byte consists of 8 bits, a MAC address occupies 6 bytes in total.
Bytes. (B = bytes. b = bits.)
helen is 6 bytes because each letter has 8 bits.
two thousand bits No, there are 8 bits in a byte.
On a 16 bit i80386 machine a nibble represents 4 bits or half of a byte. A byte represents 8 bits. A word represents 16 bits or 2 bytes. On 32 bit machines the DWORD(double word) is available and represents 32 bits or 4 bytes. On the newer 64 bit machines a QWORD represents 64 bits or 8 bytes of data. QWORD stands for QuadWord or Quadruple Word. On modern computers, a single character consumes 2 bytes of data in memory. So the word cat would consume 6 bytes. These are known as DBCS or double-byte character sets.
18 bytes is 144 bits.
72 bits is 9 bytes.
56 bits is 7 bytes.
4800 bits is 600 bytes.
16777216 bits 2097152 bytes
4,096 bytes is equal to 32,768 bits.