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- Path: news.onramp.net!usenet
- From: jaldr@onramp.net (James Aldridge)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.modems
- Subject: Re: Please Explain Octets
- Date: Fri, 22 Mar 1996 04:44:56 GMT
- Organization: On-Ramp; Individual Internet Connections; Dallas/Ft Worth/Houston, TX USA
- Message-ID: <31522f13.88976436@news.onramp.net>
- References: <4ii0aa$n8f@news-e2b.gnn.com> <4ip8d6$n3p@mips.pfalz.de>
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-
- On 20 Mar 1996 16:31:50 +0100, naddy@mips.pfalz.de (Christian
- Weisgerber) wrote:
-
- >An "octet" is a group of eight bits. Newbies call it a "byte", but there
- >were times when a byte could be anything from six to nine bits,
- >depending on the machine architecture, and thus the precise term "octet"
- >was introduced in the communications field.
-
- Actually, I'm not at all a newbie, but a byte and 8 bits have become
- synonymous in common usage, though it is true that the term byte
- originally referred to the number of binary digits needed to code a
- single alphanumeric character, which did vary from system to system.
-
- And while I'm at it, the term newbie kinda bugs me. As a teacher, I
- applaud people who tackle new fields, whether archeological,
- computational, or whatever. "Newbie" seems to have an undesirable,
- pejorative ring to it. "New colleague" sounds a lot better.
-
- James Aldridge - Fort Worth, Texas, USA
- jaldr@onramp.net or aldrjame@tenet.edu
- http://rampages.onramp.net/~jaldr
-