Convert Kibibytes (KiB) to Tebibytes (TiB)
Enter a value below to convert Kibibytes (KiB) to Tebibytes (TiB).
Conversion:
1 Kibibytes (KiB) = 9.3132257462e-10 Tebibytes (TiB)
How to Convert Kibibytes (KiB) to Tebibytes (TiB)
1 kib = 9.3132257462e-10 tib
1 tib = 1073741824 kib
Example: convert 15 Kibibytes (KiB) to Tebibytes (TiB):
25 kib = 2.3283064365e-8 tib
Kibibytes (KiB) to Tebibytes (TiB) Conversion Table
| Kibibytes (KiB) | Tebibytes (TiB) |
|---|---|
| 0.01 kib | 9.3132257462e-12 tib |
| 0.1 kib | 9.3132257462e-11 tib |
| 1 kib | 9.3132257462e-10 tib |
| 2 kib | 1.8626451492e-9 tib |
| 3 kib | 2.7939677238e-9 tib |
| 5 kib | 4.6566128731e-9 tib |
| 10 kib | 9.3132257462e-9 tib |
| 20 kib | 1.8626451492e-8 tib |
| 50 kib | 4.6566128731e-8 tib |
| 100 kib | 9.3132257462e-8 tib |
| 1000 kib | 9.3132257462e-7 tib |
Kibibytes (KiB)
Definition
A kibibyte (KiB) is a binary unit of digital information equal to 1,024 bytes (2¹⁰ bytes). It was introduced by the IEC to distinguish from the decimal kilobyte (1,000 bytes).
History
The kibibyte was standardized by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) in 1998 as part of a set of binary prefixes (kibi-, mebi-, gibi-, tebi-) to eliminate the ambiguity between decimal and binary interpretations of data units.
Current use
Kibibytes are used in operating systems, programming, and technical specifications where exact binary sizes matter — such as memory allocation, page sizes, and kernel-level storage reporting.
Tebibytes (TiB)
Definition
A tebibyte (TiB) is a binary unit of digital information equal to 1,099,511,627,776 bytes (2⁴⁰ bytes). It is precisely 1,024 gibibytes.
History
The tebibyte was standardized by the IEC in 1998 as part of the binary prefix system. Enterprise storage, server environments, and cloud computing increasingly distinguish TiB from TB for pricing and capacity planning accuracy.
Current use
Tebibytes are used in enterprise storage systems, data center capacity planning, cloud billing (e.g., AWS, Azure), and high-performance computing environments where binary-accurate measurements are critical.