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Date:      Wed, 30 May 2001 10:16:22 -0400
From:      jmr <jmr@pragmagic.com>
To:        Bill Moran <wmoran@iowna.com>
Cc:        John Summerfield <summer@os2.ami.com.au>, freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Large Hard Drive Trouble
Message-ID:  <3B1500B6.F4CB27A4@pragmagic.com>
References:  <200105300602.f4U62or31180@possum.os2.ami.com.au> <3B14F7D8.9EBAF909@iowna.com>

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the late 1790's,
even before chuck babbage and the analytical engine.
instead of complaining,
we should be thankful they got the 1000 right;
since they got the length of the metre,
the mass of the gram; etc. etc. wrong.



Bill Moran wrote:

> John Summerfield wrote:
> > Ohm I don't know about that. How long ago did the French decide
> > Kilometre means 1000 metres?
>
> Kilometer does mean 1000 meters, and kilobyte means 1024 bytes.
> http://foldoc.doc.ic.ac.uk/foldoc/foldoc.cgi?prefix
>
> > The suffixes K, M, G for x1000, x1000000 and x1000000000 predate the DP
> > industry by a while.
>
> And the word "port" predates it even more, yet "the DP industry" has
> redefined it for special usage. There are many more examples of this,
> many outside "the DP industry". Language changes over time.
>
> > I've been in the DP industry for longer than Unix has existed, and on
> > reflection, I think we got it wrong.
>
> Possibly. But regardless, it's still used 2 different ways, which
> frequently causes confusion, and that was my original point.
> Regardless of which base is "correct", the HDD manufacturers _know_ that
> using base 2 for byte sizes is generally accepted practice in the
> industry, and they intentionally use base 10 because it _looks_ bigger,
> NOT because they are trying to be on some side of some old argument.
>
> --
> If a bird in the hand
> is worth two in the bush,
> then what can I get for
> two hands in the bush?
>
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