A bit is an eighth of a dollar, but in this sense it is never used in the singular. Two bits is a quarter.
'Chuffed' means you are pleased with something. Chuffed to bits means very pleased with something. For example: 'I am chuffed to bits that I passed my driving exam!'
It means he gave his opinion on the subject.
It means "dirty bastard". It's used in Edinburgh, and probably other bits of Scotland.
Half of a byte (8 bits) is a 'nybble' (4 bits)
to take another try. ex: the girl failed her test, at least she get another bit of the cherry next year!
I think you mean "two bits" like the litte song, "Shave and a haircut, two bits." Two bits is a quarter, twenty five cents.
Eight bits in a byte.
In ASCII encoding, if that's what you mean by "bits": 110110011011111110110110010100100000111100111011111110101 That's "love you", in ASCII.
In bits and pieces
kbps > Kilo Bits Per Second > 1024 bits per second mbps > Mega Bits Per Second > 1024 kilo bits per second
There are 8 bits in a byte.People use a lowercase 'b' to mean "bits" and an uppercase "B" to mean bytes. So if a hard drive has 500GB, that's giga-bytes. But if a network cable lists its speed as 10Mbps, that means 10 mega-bits per second.
No it just mean 8 bits.
dude shes a zombie
In bits and pieces
nit
MB mean Mega bytes ..mb mean mega bits.
'Chuffed' means you are pleased with something. Chuffed to bits means very pleased with something. For example: 'I am chuffed to bits that I passed my driving exam!'