To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
astroraptor,
"You know, I always thought it was funny that hard drives were listed as physical bytes vs. logical bytes. Maybe I'm old fashioned but I prefer xB over xiB, the latter of which I find a little silly."
I think I see what people are getting stuck over. Is it that you don't want to see consumer products switching to xiB units? I can understand your reluctance, however it's slightly unfounded because most electronics are already being sold with the correct SI units, so consumers would not have to undergo a "switch" at all.
IE, when you buy a "1TB harddisk", it's *already* correct with respect to SI unit scaling and so it doesn't need to convert to 0.91TiB or anything "silly" like that.
The only place a consumer conversion to xiB units would be appropriate IMHO would be RAM capacities since these are the only components which are genuinely manufactured with capacities in powers of 2 and thus xiB units are an exact representation.
Edited 2013-01-31 15:24 UTC




Member since:
2005-07-22
You know, I always thought it was funny that hard drives were listed as physical bytes vs. logical bytes. Maybe I'm old fashioned but I prefer xB over xiB, the latter of which I find a little silly. Tablets and phones should come with the advertized amount of data available to the user. That only makes sense to me. The mentality isn't the same for me as a hard drive for a computer. Since you can't install any other OS to the device (without hacking anyway), then you really don't have 64GB (59.6GiB
) available to you personally.