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A kilobyte is 1024 bytes. Yes, I know "kilo" means 1000 - I don't care since it's obvious from context.
Back in the day, using base-10 prefixes for base-2 stuff was considered fine. 1024 is close enough to 1000, after all. It only changed when some dickhead realised that, by insisting that a kilobyte (and the bigger units) was 1000 bytes, they could sell you less hard drive space without lowering the number on the box.
If you don't believe me, look at your RAM. Nobody's ever sold RAM by the "gibibyte".
Keep spreading the good word, brother. Amen.
ty this always struck me as odd but yeah that makes prefect sense now that I see it written that way. Obviously it's a marketing thing. Obviously!
Numerical marketing is nonsense all around.
Video, which was always counted by vertical resolution (lines on analog TV), suddenly became horizontal with 4K, 8K, and it's not even close, 4K usually referring to 3840x2160.
There are three entirely different things that "5G" can refer to: the mobile network standard, 5GHz WiFi standard, or 5Gbps network connection.
If you want to be upset, look at internet speeds, they sell you mbps (megabits per second), but the standard measurement is mbps (megabytes per second), so they sell you a number 8 times bigger than the one you get.
That ones actually fine IMO because they advertise Mbps which is fairly clearly different from MBps (b vs B, bit vs byte), and very easy to convert between.
yhea, we can assume that the vast majority of the public don't know the difference