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.
In ASCII encoding, if that's what you mean by "bits": 110110011011111110110110010100100000111100111011111110101 That's "love you", in ASCII.
Eight bits in a byte.
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.
dude shes a zombie
No it just mean 8 bits.
nit
In bits and pieces
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!'