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Elign Moderator

 Joined: 18 Dec 2004 Posts: 271
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 9:29 am
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So that would make Europeans think Bill Gates could buy all the gold in the world?
And 1 GB would be able to have seemingly endless movies, games, etc.
And 1 GHz could power a supercomputer.
And China would probably be able to rule the world by now (and flood everybody's email boxes with thousands upon thousands of spams).
That's one (perhaps minor) detriment of the Internet's (and other media) global nature: confusion. |
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Gamer_V Gaming Demi-god

 Joined: 03 Mar 2005 Posts: 1143 Location: The Netherlands
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 9:34 am
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And 1 GB would be able to have seemingly endless movies, games, etc.
And 1 GHz could power a supercomputer.
This doesn't really make any sense... whatever... |
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Dogbreath Admin

 Joined: 14 Sep 2002 Posts: 4439 Location: In the back of a jacked-up Ford.
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 9:38 am
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No, a gigabyte equals 1,073,741,824 bytes the world over. "giga", in computer terms, meaning 2^30.
(one kilobyte= 2^10, one megabyte= 2^20, one terrabyte= 2^40, etc. etc. etc.) |
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Elign Moderator

 Joined: 18 Dec 2004 Posts: 271
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 9:48 am
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| Gamer_V wrote: | And 1 GB would be able to have seemingly endless movies, games, etc.
And 1 GHz could power a supercomputer.
This doesn't really make any sense... whatever... |
Replace the G with a T and you'll see what I mean. But assuming DB is correct, at least the measurement of computer capacity is unaffected by international differences in numeric notation. |
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dosraider Admin

 Joined: 15 Mar 2005 Posts: 7204 Location: ROTFLMAO in Belgium.
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 11:03 am
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| Elign wrote: | | . ...... at least the measurement of computer capacity is unaffected by international differences in numeric notation. |
alas :NO
| Dogbreath wrote: | a gigabyte equals 1,073,741,824 bytes the world over.
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For us europeans it is:
1.073.741.824 bytes , and i am not nitpicking here.
It is a problem when you begin learning english, and maths, i wunder when and where the difference begon.
So far for the international standards............  |
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Gamer_V Gaming Demi-god

 Joined: 03 Mar 2005 Posts: 1143 Location: The Netherlands
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 12:56 pm
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This topic makes me all pointy. Damn, I'm funny. |
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Dogbreath Admin

 Joined: 14 Sep 2002 Posts: 4439 Location: In the back of a jacked-up Ford.
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 1:49 pm
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| dosraider wrote: | | Elign wrote: | | . ...... at least the measurement of computer capacity is unaffected by international differences in numeric notation. |
alas :NO |
Okay. So what's the difference in value? Where does it start? Your gigabyte seems the same as ours, is it your terabyte? I'm really confused as to what you mean... |
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Gamer_V Gaming Demi-god

 Joined: 03 Mar 2005 Posts: 1143 Location: The Netherlands
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 2:05 pm
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| Gigabytes are the same over here as over there, same with therabytes. He means like, millions an billions are reversed, and . and , - I think |
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dosraider Admin

 Joined: 15 Mar 2005 Posts: 7204 Location: ROTFLMAO in Belgium.
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 2:28 pm
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What i mean is: we read 1,300 not as thousand threehunderd but as 1,3 .
Or in your notation: 1.3
I give up , here and now,my anglaise is not good enough for such a discution, nor to explain fully what i mean.
You drive me crazy
I'm outta here. |
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dosraider Admin

 Joined: 15 Mar 2005 Posts: 7204 Location: ROTFLMAO in Belgium.
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 3:07 pm
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One last desperate go:
Ower maths: 1,000 bit x 1,000 bit x 1,000 bit = 1 bit.
Tadaaaa, if you don't get it now what i mean, now gamer_3,990 +gamer_1,010 may explain it.
BTW: gamer_3,990 +gamer_1,010= gamer_5 or gamer_V
and me and myself:.............................  |
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Gamer_V Gaming Demi-god

 Joined: 03 Mar 2005 Posts: 1143 Location: The Netherlands
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 4:02 pm
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gamer_V = gamer_Vincent
That's math!  |
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Kazer0 Mercenary Dishwasher
 Joined: 17 Sep 2002 Posts: 2719 Location: In an igloo with my pet penguin, eh?
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 5:21 pm
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| Friend, computer constants are anything but constant. To hard drive manufacturers, 40gb = 40,000,000,000 bytes (Im guessing the number), while its actually rounded to 38,000,000,000. Why? Because HD Manu's use 10^x as the base for calculations, while software companies use 2^x, which is the correct term. 10^x just returns a larger number, therefore they can upsell. |
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julie124 Gaming Demi-god

 Joined: 18 Dec 2004 Posts: 2085 Location: The land that is found and new
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 6:41 pm
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lol this is not my kinda topic, I know nothing of inwhich you speak people  |
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Dosser Way too much free time

 Joined: 02 Jan 2005 Posts: 470 Location: BEHIND YOU
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 8:31 pm
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Damn them, selling me a 40gb hard drive and then giving me a 38Gb.
Actually, how is that even legal? It seems they are intentionally (and significantly) fudging the maths in their favour.
Now that I've checked, I only have 35.2Gb OHHH THE HUMANITY |
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Dogbreath Admin

 Joined: 14 Sep 2002 Posts: 4439 Location: In the back of a jacked-up Ford.
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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 9:43 pm
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| Kazer0 wrote: | | Friend, computer constants are anything but constant. To hard drive manufacturers, 40gb = 40,000,000,000 bytes (Im guessing the number), while its actually rounded to 38,000,000,000. Why? Because HD Manu's use 10^x as the base for calculations, while software companies use 2^x, which is the correct term. 10^x just returns a larger number, therefore they can upsell. |
Yes yes yes, I'm quite aware. However, this happens in a consistently unconstant manor the world over, so it's not relevant to this conversation. |
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