What is bitrate and what does it measure?
In computing - or more specifically in streaming - bit rate, or bitrate, is the number of bits that are transferred or processed per some unit of time. Bitrate is often measured in bits per second (bit/s also bps), where large values are presented with SI prefixes also known as metric or decimal prefixes, thus:
| Prefix | Unit | Number of bits | |----------|----------|-------------------------| | kilobit | 1 kbit/s | 1000 bit/s | | megabit | 1 Mbit/s | 1.000.000 bit/s | | gigabit | 1 Gbit/s | 1.000.000.000 bit/s | | terabit | 1 Tbit/s | 1.000.000.000.000 bit/s |
We have to be mindful that bps and Bps mean different things. Bits per second (bps) refers to uploading or downloading speed, while bytes per second (Bps) refers to the amount of data transferred.
In practice bitrate effectively determines the quality level of media (audio or video) that is being streamed over the network. In general audio streaming, bitrates are set up to around 160 kbit/s depending on the encoding and protocol used and easily handled by most networks today. Video, however, demands much higher bitrates to achieve the wanted quality.
In video, a higher bitrate enables higher image quality in output, due to the higher amount of data being transferred per time unit. The bitrate influences the video file size for local viewing or the minimum necessary network bandwidth of the user for the uninterrupted viewing experience of the streaming video. The following table presents approximate video bitrates for common video presets:
| Type | Resolution | Standard Frame Rate (24, 25, 30) [Mbit/s] | High Frame Rate (48, 50, 60) [Mbit/s] | |:-----:|:-----------:|:-----------------------------------------:|:-------------------------------------:| | 360p | 480 x 360 | 1 | 1.5 | | 480p | 858 x 480 | 2.5 | 4 | | 720p | 1280 x 720 | 5 | 7.5 | | 1080p | 1920 x 1080 | 8 | 12 | | 1440p | 2560 x 1440 | 16 | 24 | | 2160p | 3860 x 2160 | 35-45 | 53-68 |
Video quality also depends on the use of adaptive bitrate and specific encoding, resolution and framerate.
The act of transferring or saving information into a usable file format.