On 3/28/23 17:03, Fred Cisin via cctalk wrote:

> "1.4M" disks (1,474,560 bytes of data / 1.474 SI Megabytes / 1.40625
> Mebibytes) are often called "1.44M", because that number is derived from
> 1,024,000 bytes per "megabyte" (2^10 * 10^6, 1000 * 1024), giving 1.44.
> I can find no defensible reason for that corrupted size for a "megabyte".
> Therefore, I call them "1.4M" (1.40625), NOT "1.44M"
> 
Unfortunately, we're stuck with the terminology.  We probably should
call them 2.0 megabyte floppies (at 500Khz, you can fit 12,500
unformatted 8 bit bytes on a track, so 12,500*2*80 = is exactly
2,000,000 bytes.

Or, as the young clerk at the Fedex counter asked the other day, "What's
a floppy disk?".  Yes, Fred, we're THAT old.

--Chuck


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