720RPM 3.5" FDDs?

Fred Cisin cisin at xenosoft.com
Sun Feb 1 17:29:38 CST 2009


On Sun, 1 Feb 2009, Dan Gahlinger wrote:
> actually it's not an even million.
> a megabyte is 1024*1024 bytes
> (1024 K), a mb is a million bytes, but an MB is 1,048,576 bytes
> 1K = 1024 bytes, not 1000 bytes.

I agree wholeheartedly with Dan about a megabyte (MB) being 2^20 bytes
(1024 * 1024,  1024K,  1048576).


But, we have to be careful about the abbreviations.
Some would insist that "mb" would have to be "milli-bit"!


Those who "have to" have 1000 * 1000 as their unit, would like us to us
"Mebi-Byte" as the name for 1048576.


And of course, we need a name for the Unscrupulous IBM Marketing unit.
("UIMU"?)
I do not accept that there is ANY possible rationale that would justify
1000 * 1024 as being a valid unit of measure.  Particularly when the same
UNSCRUPULOUS MARKETING units use 1024 * 1024 for RAM.

--
Grumpy Ol' Fred     		cisin at xenosoft.com


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