always thought it was a windows power of 2 thing.
1,2,4,8,16,32,64,128,256,512,1024
vs a normal persons way of doing things
I prefer 1000 to 1024
its a bit like imperial and metric in my eyes.
i prefer a yard to a meter. and as such i prefer 1000K to 1024K "it may seem a bit contradictory for people who are now thinking. but a kelomiter is 1000 meeters"
but to me mm/cm extera are just to accurate for general use.
id rather say an inch than 2.53whatever the hell it is cm's
so i go with manufaturers of hard disks and say windows should not confuse the layman with using power of 2 for storage so when they buy a 750Gb hard disk they actually get 750 reported in windows. not something more like 700.
people get confused with that stuff..
having said that if mfrs used 1024 instead of 1000 then we would get more space..
But again its like yards and meters to me and i prefer the easiest one. which is yards "3 feet. 36 inches not 3.sumthing stupid feet. and some crazy decimal placed cm."
as for the rant.. lower and upper case. i never bother making sure its correct.
only time i bother with it is with internet speeds and then i look and see what the rated speed is 4.0M/ps devide that by 8 and i come out with my aproximate download speed of 500K/ps
thats all bits and bytes though.
and those are an 8th of the size of the other
.
but when it comes to GB vs Gb. thats a power of 2 thing. and not the diference between a bit and a byte. its just a diference between a standard size.
if it was bits and bytes then a 1tb hard disk would be 125.. and that would be rediculous.
But it is implied that one is bits and the other is bytes with the lower or upper case B.. which again can end up confusing people.
if you think its bits vs bytes then you will think 1Tb is 125GB, when its not the case at all..
P.s
i also prefer celcius to farenheight.
if your going to use faren height you may aswell just use kelvin and have done with it.
i like 0c "tripple point of water" 100c"boiling point of water" (depending on pressure obviously)
vs 32f for tripple point and something stupid like 265f for the boiling point..
sure its more accurate. but like i said if you want to be that accurate about things use kelvin.
there is no need for that much accuracy in most things that we humans get up to daily.
1,2,4,8,16,32,64,128,256,512,1024
vs a normal persons way of doing things
I prefer 1000 to 1024
its a bit like imperial and metric in my eyes.
i prefer a yard to a meter. and as such i prefer 1000K to 1024K "it may seem a bit contradictory for people who are now thinking. but a kelomiter is 1000 meeters"
but to me mm/cm extera are just to accurate for general use.
id rather say an inch than 2.53whatever the hell it is cm's
so i go with manufaturers of hard disks and say windows should not confuse the layman with using power of 2 for storage so when they buy a 750Gb hard disk they actually get 750 reported in windows. not something more like 700.
people get confused with that stuff..
having said that if mfrs used 1024 instead of 1000 then we would get more space..
But again its like yards and meters to me and i prefer the easiest one. which is yards "3 feet. 36 inches not 3.sumthing stupid feet. and some crazy decimal placed cm."
as for the rant.. lower and upper case. i never bother making sure its correct.
only time i bother with it is with internet speeds and then i look and see what the rated speed is 4.0M/ps devide that by 8 and i come out with my aproximate download speed of 500K/ps
thats all bits and bytes though.
and those are an 8th of the size of the other
.
but when it comes to GB vs Gb. thats a power of 2 thing. and not the diference between a bit and a byte. its just a diference between a standard size.
if it was bits and bytes then a 1tb hard disk would be 125.. and that would be rediculous.
But it is implied that one is bits and the other is bytes with the lower or upper case B.. which again can end up confusing people.
if you think its bits vs bytes then you will think 1Tb is 125GB, when its not the case at all..
P.s
i also prefer celcius to farenheight.
if your going to use faren height you may aswell just use kelvin and have done with it.
i like 0c "tripple point of water" 100c"boiling point of water" (depending on pressure obviously)
vs 32f for tripple point and something stupid like 265f for the boiling point..
sure its more accurate. but like i said if you want to be that accurate about things use kelvin.
there is no need for that much accuracy in most things that we humans get up to daily.
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