Performance - Memory/CPU Usage panel: on lower right the word Megabyte is misspelled...
daiche
Simon!
Horror of Horrors! The word Megabyte is misspelled as Mebibyte in the panel listed above. I am sure that is causing some obscure problem in SDR Console. HaHa! Regards, Dave Aichelman N7NZH Grants Pass, Oregon |
|
Per
1 Mebibyte (MiB) equals 220 or 1,048,576 bytes. 1 Megabyte (MB) usually refers to 106 bytes (1,000,000) bytes. So I seriously doubt this is misspelled by Simon. 73 de LA9XKA - Per On 09.01.2022 21:21, daiche via groups.io wrote: Simon! |
|
daiche
Well then I stand corrected! I have seen no reference to Mebibyte before.
Regards, Dave Aichelman N7NZH Grants Pass, Oregon |
|
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
From: main@SDR-Radio.groups.io <main@SDR-Radio.groups.io> On Behalf Of daiche via groups.io
Sent: 09 January 2022 21:03 To: main@SDR-Radio.groups.io Subject: Re: [SDR-Radio] Performance - Memory/CPU Usage panel: on lower right the word Megabyte is misspelled...
Well then I stand corrected! I have seen no reference to Mebibyte before. -- - + - + -
Please use https://forum.sdr-radio.com:4499/ when posting questions or problems. |
|
Dewey
Yep… and there is also a gibibyte and a tebibyte… who thinks of these things ???
😊 Dewey
From: main@SDR-Radio.groups.io <main@SDR-Radio.groups.io> On Behalf Of daiche via groups.io
Sent: Sunday, January 9, 2022 16:03 To: main@SDR-Radio.groups.io Subject: Re: [SDR-Radio] Performance - Memory/CPU Usage panel: on lower right the word Megabyte is misspelled...
Well then I stand corrected! I have seen no reference to Mebibyte before. |
|
jdow
Are you sure? Look up SI Units.
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
{o.o} On 20220109 12:21:30, daiche via
groups.io wrote:
Simon! |
|
jdow
Pedants
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
{o.o} On 20220109 13:07:29, Dewey wrote:
|
|
On Sun, Jan 9, 2022 at 04:07 PM, Dewey wrote:
It comes from hard drive manufacturers and the desire to shave off a bit of size to make some profit. Hard drives are sold by 1000 bytes to the kB instead of 1024 bytes to the kB. As this expands to larger sizes, this allows hard drive (or SSD) manufacturers to sell a 4 TB drive that has 361 GB less storage than expected. At these sizes, that little change from 1024 to 1000 certainly adds up. Windows uses 1024 bytes to the kB (and so on up the chain). That's why when you put in a hard drive in Windows, you see less than expected. Here is an example. I have three 4 TB drives in a RAID array on my server. Yet these supposedly 4 TB drives (that say 4 TB on the box and label) really just have 3.639 TB of storage. That's 9% shaved off - or 361 GB. That is indeed quite sizable. Across these three drives, the amount of storage that has been shaved off is approximately 1 TB! With three 4 TB drives, I would expect to have 12 TB of storage. Yet I only have 10.9 TB of storage. When hard drive manufacturers started this nonsense, they used to put fine print on the package saying that they defined a kB (or MB or whatever) as 1000 instead of 1024. Then they got the idea to simply rebrand the measurements so that no fine print was needed. That was certainly evil, but rather ingenious. This sort of thing unfortunately happens quite often.
|
|