On Thu, 2009-06-25 at 12:22 +1000, Ben Finney wrote: > Russ Allbery <r...@debian.org> writes: > > > Bill Allombert <bill.allomb...@math.u-bordeaux1.fr> writes: > > > > > I would prefer if the word kibibyte was not used in policy, so I > > > would strike '(in other words, the size in kibibytes)'. > > > > I don't much like the word either, but at this point it's an IEEE and > > ISO standard (IEEE 1541-2002). My feeling is that standards are more > > important than aesthetics and we should generally follow established > > standards in areas like this unless there's some compelling reason not > > to. > > +1. The unit being discussed (number of bytes divided by 1024) has an > internationally-accepted standard term, and even if we find the term > ugly we should acknowledge that term in our use of that unit to clarify > the intent.
/AOL While a 'kilobyte' was a close enough approximation of a 'kibibyte', the percentage difference gets much more significant as we increase disk size. 1000 1024 102.40% 1000000 1048576 104.86% 1000000000 1073741824 107.37% 1000000000000 1099511627776 109.95% 1000000000000000 1125899906842620 112.59% We should just use the right term, and we should collectively get over any dislike of it. Cheers, Andrew. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ andrew (AT) morphoss (DOT) com +64(272)DEBIAN Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred. -- Martin luther King Jr. ------------------------------------------------------------------------
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