Omg, I released a monster :) 

Reasoning behind the k/M/G was that I was thought that this the right
way to do it, didn't even think there's other correct ways. In school
(atleast in Europe) the SI system is used and it emphasizes that K is
for Kelvin and k is for kilo (like m=meter, M=mega, g=gram, G=Giga). 

Anyway, like I said, this is a tiny issue. Users know what it means no
matter is it k or K.

-Mikko Linnalo

On ti, 2006-01-31 at 01:54 -0800, Brian J. Tarricone wrote:
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> Benedikt Meurer wrote:
> > 
> > So, to sum up, we don't touch it and leave it as KB/MB/GB?
> 
> I'd say kB/MB/GB, but it's of course up to you.
> 
>       -b
> 
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