Paul Johnson wrote: > On Tuesday 18 April 2006 05:31, Willie Wonka wrote: > > > Maybe I'm dense, but; > > kb = kilobit > > KB = KiloByte > > mb = megabit > > MB = MegaByte > > > > 1 bit * 8 = 1 byte ^^ I forgot to capitalize my 'B' in "Byte" above
> > 1 Byte / 8 = 1 bit > > That's right, except it's kb or kB (for kilobits and kilobytes respectively), > never KB or Kb. k is "kilo," K is "Karat." > Ok - thanks - now only if everyone would remember and use these... What I more than eluded to earlier; concerning SATA specs and serial signaling data transfer rates...have I found a solution ? IOW - Is this how one would correctly display these rates ? 1500mbps = 1.5gbps = 187.5mBps = 1.875gBps ? As you can see the capitalized 'B' appears a tad ...'out of place'(?), but it's likely /very/ necessary, in order to maintain clarity. While I may over-annunciate and over-emphasize when referring to "Bytes", instead of "bits" (via my use of GB/MB/KB vs. gb/mb/kb), it seems my silly method may be more effective - otherwise we're in for some serious rabid-rabbits taking over - with all those *Karats* (Carrots) hanging around, ready to be eaten :-) Contextually though, they are completely different - like oh say using the acronym *IDE* , which can be Integrated Device Electronics -or- Integrated Development Environment ((in most 'computer' circles) and completely dependent upon the context of it's use). oh, the heck with it, lol ;-) I've seen some well-known hardware review sites refer to SATA drive specs as *1.5GBPS* (and similarly, 3.0GBps for SATA II / SATA 2 spec.) BTW - if anyone's a Jeweler, would the 'K' (Karat) ever be used in combination with a 'B' ? (capital or lowercase)....and I never could remember if Karat is with a 'K' or a 'C' :doh: __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]