Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 28th Jun 2006 19:24 UTC, submitted by luna6
Hardware, Embedded Systems "Western Digital has settled a class action lawsuit concerning the deceptive labeling of their hard drives. The problem occured when consumers bought hard drives with a stated capacity. As an example, let's say you purchased a Western Digital 250 gigabyte hard drive. After you install the drive into your computer, you will notice that the drive size has become 231 gigabytes. The reason for this is that Western Digital, along with most hard drive manufacturers, calculates the storage capacity of their hard drives using the decimal system. This in contrast to virtually all operating systems that calculates the capacity of the hard drives with the binary system. As hard drives become larger, this discrepancy grows larger."
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RE: re:Technically...
by Wrawrat on Wed 28th Jun 2006 22:09 UTC in reply to "re:Technically..."
Wrawrat
Member since:
2005-06-30

Actually, it's 1,073,741,824 bytes...

As for staying with the old definition because of history, I don't know. Should we go back to the imperial system because it was used for years? Anyway, many open-source software are starting to use the binary prefix.

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