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This is the 10th episode. And as you can see in the title, I am counting the episodes in hexadecimal. I am wondering if the google algorithm will screw this up with the suggested next video is wrong. Anyway, I want to explain in this video why hexadecimal is cool and why you should use it, when it comes to computers. I will also show you how I convert values back and forth and how I often work with them. Ok. So. our computers work in binary, 0s and 1s. Because it is a representation of the physical behaviour of our circuits that we have transistors, that are like switches and they are either turned on or off. A single value that is either 0 or 1 is called a bit. You may know that a byte is 8 bits. But maybe you wonder why that is. Well, this was not always the case. Early computers might have had 6 bits per byte. That we use 8 bits for a byte nowadays is just how history turned out. It was IBMs fault with the System 360 that heavily pushed for an 8-bit byte. Also some people say octad