Bitrate is how fast data travels from one place to another, like a stream of information flowing through a pipe.
Imagine you're filling up a water bottle with a hose. If the hose is wide open and lets a lot of water flow in quickly, it fills up faster than if the hose is barely turned on. In this case, the bitrate is like how much water flows into the bottle each second, more water means a higher bitrate.
How Bitrate Works
Think of your favorite video game. When you're playing online, the game sends and receives information constantly. If the bitrate is high, the game feels smooth because data moves quickly between your device and the game server. But if the bitrate is low, like a slow hose, the game might lag or freeze, making it harder to play.
Bitrate in Action
A music stream on your phone has a certain bitrate, too. If you're listening to songs with high quality, that means more data is moving through your phone's connection each second compared to when you listen to lower quality songs.
So bitrate is just the speed of information travel, and it can make things like videos, music, and games feel smoother or slower, depending on how much data is moving at once.
Examples
- If you stream music at 128 kbps, it’s like receiving 128,000 bits per second.
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See also
- How Does Streaming versus movie theaters in 2022 l GMA Work?
- How Does Music Distribution is Changing (5 things to look for) Work?
- How Does Streaming vs Broadcasting Work?
- How Streaming Brought Back The Bad Old Days of Hollywood?
- How Music Got Loud (The Loudness Wars Explained)?