On Wed, 2007-06-13 at 15:06 +0100, Scott James Remnant wrote: > On Wed, 2007-06-13 at 15:01 +0100, Alex Jones wrote: > > > 1 TB is not rounded. It means precisely 1 × 10^12 bytes, no more and no > > less. > > > No it doesn't. > > The meaning of 1 TB depends on the context, and has always done so.
Your correct, 1TB always meant 1 x 2^20 And before you start in again... No that is not context sensitive. The B denotes bytes, which denotes a computer context, and therefore the metric context is no longer applicable. At least historically. However, now that the SI has become standard, we can now allow TB to take on the metric 1 x 10^12 and use TiB to mean 1 x 2^20. Now we eliminate context, and can say what we mean... Unless you are trying to deceive? I hope that is not what you are proposing. Ubuntu is not the only distro having these conversations lately. It is time to start using the standard. Standards are created to get everyone on the same page. I find it unsettling that the one guy arguing against the standard set aside by IEC, IEEE, NIST, CENELEC, and the EU, has an @ubuntu.com address. I would expect someone of that high level to embrace not reject the standards of the industry. -- Kevin Fries Senior Linux Engineer Computer and Communications Technologies, Inc. a division of Japan Communications, Inc.
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