In 1995, the National Institute of Standards & Technology (NIST) created a new standard for defining binary numbers in order to eliminate ambiguity. NIST binary expresses the true binary value rather than the common references, which are rounded numbers. For example, "megabyte" is widely used to mean one million bytes, or 1,000,000 (10
6) bytes. However, whenever specifications of digital products are given, the true binary value of megabyte is 1,048,576 (2
20) bytes. The NIST binary number for megabyte is "mebibyte," which reflects the actual number (see
binary values).
Has It Caught On?
It depends on how technical the articles. After decades, NIST binary may be used from a fraction to half as many times as the traditional kilo, mega and giga references. See
binary values.
NIST BINARY
The first two letters are the same + "bi."
BITS in: Bits in:
Decimal NIST Binary
kilobit (Kb) kibibit (Kib)
megabit (Mb) mebibit (Mib)
gigabit (Gb) gibibit (Gib)
terabit (Tb) tebibit (Tib)
petabit (Tb) pebibit (Pib)
exabit (Eb) exbibit (Eib)
zettabit (Zb) zebibit (Zib)
yottabit (Yb) yobibit (Yib)
BYTES in: Bytes in:
Decimal NIST Binary
kilobyte (KB) kibibyte (KiB)
megabyte (MB) mebibyte (MiB)
gigabyte (GB) gibibyte (GiB)
terabyte (TB) tebibyte (TiB)
petabyte (TB) pebibyte (PiB)
exabyte (EB) exbibyte (EiB)
zettabyte (ZB) zebibyte (ZiB)
yottabyte (YB) yobibyte (YiB)