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GeneralRe: Centibytes, anyone? Pin
Eddy Vluggen22-Nov-23 7:49
professionalEddy Vluggen22-Nov-23 7:49 
GeneralRe: Centibytes, anyone? Pin
Peter_in_278021-Nov-23 14:14
professionalPeter_in_278021-Nov-23 14:14 
JokeRe: Centibytes, anyone? Pin
Daniel Pfeffer21-Nov-23 21:46
professionalDaniel Pfeffer21-Nov-23 21:46 
GeneralRe: Centibytes, anyone? Pin
jschell22-Nov-23 7:30
jschell22-Nov-23 7:30 
GeneralRe: Centibytes, anyone? Pin
trønderen23-Nov-23 12:51
trønderen23-Nov-23 12:51 
GeneralRe: Centibytes, anyone? Pin
jschell24-Nov-23 2:29
jschell24-Nov-23 2:29 
GeneralRe: Centibytes, anyone? Pin
englebart23-Nov-23 5:31
professionalenglebart23-Nov-23 5:31 
GeneralRe: Centibytes, anyone? Pin
trønderen23-Nov-23 12:01
trønderen23-Nov-23 12:01 
Yes, it is "international" in the sense that it honors my format preferences. I prefer grouping digits 3 by 3, I prefer a decimal comma rather a decimal point, and if I set the number of decimals to 3, an MB file size is reported like '15,9 MB (16 693 612,000 bytes)'.

The issue here is neither the use of M rather than the correct Mi, the kind of digit grouping or kind of separator, but the use of a decimal point (/comma) and fractional part when presenting an integer number. When teaching programming, I always refer to count values, which programmers like to call 'int' or 'long', and measurement values, which programmers like to call 'float' or 'double'. That makes it much easier for the students to learn when to use int and when to use float. Those programming this Property sheet obviously has not grasped the idea of the number of bytes being a count of bytes in the file. They treat it as if it were a measurement on a continuous scale.

For the Ki/k and Mi/M question (which is a different issue): All hard disks I ever have been in touch with, regardless of computer family, have had their total size specified in decimal units, like k, M, G and T. Networking people always specified line speeds in decimal units - in bits, not bytes. A 64 kbps line (56 kbps for those in North America) transfers 64000 (56000) bits per second.

Floppies arrived before ISO had defined the Ki, Mi, Gi, Ti, ... prefixes, and things were kind of messy - that is why ISO/IEC decided to clean up the mess by defining the standard binary prefixes. There are lots of examples of mixed use of e.g. decimal number of binary units. (The ISO/IEC standard is well above 20 years old now; yet there are lots of people stubbornly resisting to relate to it, insisting that 'We have been using ambiguous units for years, we insist on continuing to do that and do not want to clean up the mess!' Smile | :)

For the 1.44 MB floppy disks: They did have higher capacity than the 1.2 MB floppies. Maybe it wasn't quite 1.2 times as much - I am not taking the effort to look up the historical details, but when the 3.5" floppies arrived, they did have a (real) higher capacity than the 5.25" ones.

If you go far back in history: In the 1950-60s, machines addressed memory by the word, not by the byte. Memory sizes where given by the number of addressable units: words. Then IBM came with their 360 series, the first major computer series that were byte addressable, and they marketed their memory options by the byte. But their 'kilo' was 1/4 or 1/4.5 (there were lots of 36 bits machines at the time) of the 'kilo' of the competitors. This caused a lot of uproar in the 1960s.

Another unit that has been argued: Well into the 1980s (maybe someone may say even slightly into the 1990s), a byte was recognized as the space required to store a textual character. The Univac 1100 series had two byte size options: Either 6 bit, for 'Fieldata' code, uppercase only, 6 characters to a 36 bit word. Or 9 bit code, usually for ASCII, but when 8 bit character encodings entered the scene, they could be held in a 9 bit byte. The DECsystem 10 and 20 mainframes, also 36 bit machines, went for 7 bit bytes, fitting 5 characters into a word with 1 bit to spare.

In those days, if you were a radio amateur wanting to transmit digital data over your shortwave radio, in many countries you were required to use the 5 bit bytes defined by 'Baudot' telegram code standard. I don't know if that limitation ever existed in North America, and I have never heard of it being enforced in Norway, but formally, it existed longer than anyone would believe.
GeneralRe: Centibytes, anyone? Pin
englebart23-Nov-23 15:40
professionalenglebart23-Nov-23 15:40 
GeneralAnyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
Kornfeld Eliyahu Peter21-Nov-23 2:26
professionalKornfeld Eliyahu Peter21-Nov-23 2:26 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? PinPopular
Maximilien21-Nov-23 2:30
Maximilien21-Nov-23 2:30 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
Kornfeld Eliyahu Peter21-Nov-23 2:43
professionalKornfeld Eliyahu Peter21-Nov-23 2:43 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
Kenneth Bucci 202222-Nov-23 2:52
Kenneth Bucci 202222-Nov-23 2:52 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
Bruno van Dooren24-Nov-23 4:33
mvaBruno van Dooren24-Nov-23 4:33 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
jschell21-Nov-23 5:29
jschell21-Nov-23 5:29 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
Maximilien21-Nov-23 5:34
Maximilien21-Nov-23 5:34 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
Steve Raw21-Nov-23 6:57
professionalSteve Raw21-Nov-23 6:57 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
Nelek21-Nov-23 8:49
protectorNelek21-Nov-23 8:49 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
Steve Raw21-Nov-23 9:17
professionalSteve Raw21-Nov-23 9:17 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
Nelek21-Nov-23 9:23
protectorNelek21-Nov-23 9:23 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
Steve Raw21-Nov-23 10:04
professionalSteve Raw21-Nov-23 10:04 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
raddevus21-Nov-23 11:03
mvaraddevus21-Nov-23 11:03 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
Nelek21-Nov-23 11:18
protectorNelek21-Nov-23 11:18 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
charlieg22-Nov-23 1:11
charlieg22-Nov-23 1:11 
GeneralRe: Anyone got Windows 11 23H2 update? Pin
Nelek22-Nov-23 3:51
protectorNelek22-Nov-23 3:51 

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