redundant bit - meaning and definition. What is redundant bit
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What (who) is redundant bit - definition

1998 SINGLE BY GREEN DAY
Redundant (single)

Bit (horse)         
  • Horse skull showing the large gap between the front teeth and the back teeth. The bit sits in this gap, and extends beyond from side to side.
TYPE OF HORSE TACK
Horse bit; Horse bits; Champing at the bit; Chomping at the bit; Horse's bit; Horsebit
The bit is an item of a horse's tack. It usually refers to the assembly of components that contacts and controls the horse's mouth, and includes the shanks, rings, cheekpads and mullen, all described here below, but it also sometimes simply refers to the mullen, the piece that fits inside the horse's mouth.
Bit-length         
NUMBER OF BINARY DIGITS (BITS), NECESSARY TO REPRESENT AN INTEGER IN THE BINARY NUMBER SYSTEM
Bit length; Bit width
Bit-length or bit width is the number of binary digits, called bits, necessary to represent an integer as a binary number. Formally, the bit-length of a natural number n>0 is a function, bitLength(n), of the binary logarithm of n:
most significant bit         
  • A diagram showing how manipulating the least significant bits of a color can have a very subtle and generally unnoticeable affect on the color. In this diagram, green is represented by its [[RGB]] value, both in decimal and in binary. The red box surrounding the last two bits illustrates the least significant bits changed in the binary representation.
CONVENTION TO IDENTIFY BIT POSITIONS
Most significant bit; Least significant bit; Least-significant bit; Most significant byte; Least significant byte; Significant bit; Bit significance; High-order bit; LSB0; MSB0; Least significant bits; Most significant bits; Bit position; Least Significant Bit; Most Significant Bit; Lsbit; Msbit; Most-significant bit; LSB 0; LSB 1; MSB 0; MSB 1; Lowest significant bit first; Most significant bit first; LSB1; MSB1; LSB-0; LSB-1; MSB-0; MSB-1; Bit naming; Bit order; Bit ordering; High bit; Low bit; Lowest bit; Highest bit; Least-significant bit first; Least significant bit first; Most-significant bit first
¦ noun Computing the bit in a binary number which is of the greatest numerical value.

Wikipedia

Redundant (song)

"Redundant" is a song by American rock band Green Day. It was released as the third single from their fifth album, Nimrod (1997), and serves as the fourth track from that album. Released in April 1998, the song failed to match the chart positions of its predecessors but did reach number two in Australia when it was reissued as a double A-side with "Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)", becoming the band's highest-charting solo single there.

It is one of few Green Day songs in which vocalist/guitarist Billie Joe Armstrong uses an effects pedal.

Examples of use of redundant bit
1. These architects and surveyors are doubtless responding to the realisation that the tie is the sartorial equivalent of an appendix – an entirely redundant bit of kit left over from a much earlier phase of evolution.