"since, like it or not - and I don't - that's how the things are
labelled"

And for the record, to present another point of view, I *like* the way
hard drives are labeled.  Decimal is what people are used to working
with in everyday life.  We don't use 1024 for anything in real life.

Writing disk and file sizes in base 2 multiples is needlessly confusing
and serves no purpose that I know of.  It doesn't simplify anything or
fit any natural sizing of the numbers.  There's nothing about hard
drives or files that lends them to binary measurements.  The only thing
that naturally comes in powers of two is memory, and we have "KiB" and
"MiB" for that.  It has never made any sense to me why people think it
preferable to label a drive that holds close to 100,000,000,000 bytes as
"93 GB".  It's not logical or user-friendly, and the only rationale I've
heard for continuing to do it that way is that Windows does it that way.

-- 
Lucid reads file size wrong
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/538165
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