Comment on Why a kilobyte is 1000 and not 1024 bytes

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onlinepersona@programming.dev ⁨1⁩ ⁨year⁩ ago

Hard drive manufacturers know exactly what they’re doing. It’s like selling something that’s 1 fluid ounce, but not saying “this is an imperial fluid ounce” --> ~2ml less than what a US food labeling ounce is. Sell 1k, 1M, 2G fluid ounces and you’re delivering less liquid than people would expect.

The same goes for any other unit that can be ambiguous. See the imperial vs US measurement systems.

Your entire argument seems to be based on kilo = 1000, kibi = 1024, which is technically correct (inb4 “best kind of correct”), but when you format a 256GB drive and find out that you don’t actually have 256GB available (even including filesystem headers etc.) it benefits the manufacturer.

You probably don’t work for a HD manufacturer, which is why I’m jokingly calling you a shill.

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