meg or megs? gig or gigs?

Jul 10, 2007
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i can't stand it when someone says 50 gig.
if you're abbreviating from gigabytes, it because gigs, not gig.

context is "50 gig(s) of space left on the drive"
which would you use?
 

coldmeat

Diamond Member
Jul 10, 2007
9,234
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Depends on the context.

I can say it's a 50 gig hard drive, or that the hard drive holds 50 gigs.
 

Tea Bag

Golden Member
Sep 11, 2004
1,575
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"I have a 500 (gigs?) hard drive"

"I just partitioned my 250 gig drive, 50 gigs for windows and 200 gigs for pr0n"

I think you use both.
 
Jul 10, 2007
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Originally posted by: coldmeat
Depends on the context.

I can say it's a 50 gig hard drive, or that the hard drive holds 50 gigs.

correction- it does NOT depend on the context.
"it's a 50 gigabyte hard drive", not "it's a 50 gigabytes hard drive."

"the hard drive hold 50 gigabytes", not "the hard drive holds 50 gigabyte."
 

ConwayJim

Senior member
Dec 16, 2004
925
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there are bigger things in life to get upset about...but with that being said....gigs
 

rasczak

Lifer
Jan 29, 2005
10,437
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Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
Originally posted by: coldmeat
Depends on the context.

I can say it's a 50 gig hard drive, or that the hard drive holds 50 gigs.

context is "50 gig(s) of space left on the drive"
which would you use?

in this case, it would be appropriate to say gigs.
 
Jul 10, 2007
12,041
3
0
Originally posted by: rasczak
Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
Originally posted by: coldmeat
Depends on the context.

I can say it's a 50 gig hard drive, or that the hard drive holds 50 gigs.

context is "50 gig(s) of space left on the drive"
which would you use?

in this case, it would be appropriate to say gigs.

yes, and i've heard ppl say gig and it's like nails on a chalkboard.
 

rasczak

Lifer
Jan 29, 2005
10,437
23
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Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
Originally posted by: rasczak
Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
Originally posted by: coldmeat
Depends on the context.

I can say it's a 50 gig hard drive, or that the hard drive holds 50 gigs.

context is "50 gig(s) of space left on the drive"
which would you use?

in this case, it would be appropriate to say gigs.

yes, and i've heard ppl say gig and it's like nails on a chalkboard.

in that sentence it would be inappropriate yes. but in the example, i bought a 50 gig hard drive, there's no need. i'd just pull your friend aside and tell him to say it the write (write? get it? hard drive read write? hah i crack myself up) way or else :)
 
Jul 10, 2007
12,041
3
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Originally posted by: rasczak
Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
Originally posted by: rasczak
Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
Originally posted by: coldmeat
Depends on the context.

I can say it's a 50 gig hard drive, or that the hard drive holds 50 gigs.

context is "50 gig(s) of space left on the drive"
which would you use?

in this case, it would be appropriate to say gigs.

yes, and i've heard ppl say gig and it's like nails on a chalkboard.

in that sentence it would be inappropriate yes. but in the example, i bought a 50 gig hard drive, there's no need. i'd just pull your friend aside and tell him to say it the write (write? get it? hard drive read write? hah i crack myself up) way or else :)

actually, it doesn't depend on the context.

you say "i bought a 50 gigabyte hard drive", not "i bought a 50 gigabytes hard drive" so the abbreviation is gig, not gigs in this case.
therefore not context dependent.
 

rasczak

Lifer
Jan 29, 2005
10,437
23
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Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
Originally posted by: rasczak
Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
Originally posted by: rasczak
Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
Originally posted by: coldmeat
Depends on the context.

I can say it's a 50 gig hard drive, or that the hard drive holds 50 gigs.

context is "50 gig(s) of space left on the drive"
which would you use?

in this case, it would be appropriate to say gigs.

yes, and i've heard ppl say gig and it's like nails on a chalkboard.

in that sentence it would be inappropriate yes. but in the example, i bought a 50 gig hard drive, there's no need. i'd just pull your friend aside and tell him to say it the write (write? get it? hard drive read write? hah i crack myself up) way or else :)

actually, it doesn't depend on the context.

you say "i bought a 50 gigabyte hard drive", not "i bought a 50 gigabytes hard drive" so the abbreviation is gig, not gigs in this case.
therefore not context dependent.

okie dokie.

 

torpid

Lifer
Sep 14, 2003
11,631
11
76
Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
i can't stand it when someone says 50 gig.
if you're abbreviating from gigabytes, it because gigs, not gig.

context is "50 gig(s) of space left on the drive"
which would you use?

Is this written or spoken? If written it would be 50gb. If spoken it would be 50 gigabytes. I think it's goofy to use the word "gig" with or without an s, unless you are talking about musical venues.
 

destrekor

Lifer
Nov 18, 2005
28,799
359
126
Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
Originally posted by: rasczak
Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
Originally posted by: coldmeat
Depends on the context.

I can say it's a 50 gig hard drive, or that the hard drive holds 50 gigs.

context is "50 gig(s) of space left on the drive"
which would you use?

in this case, it would be appropriate to say gigs.

yes, and i've heard ppl say gig and it's like nails on a chalkboard.

It does depend on context. In your specific examples, it would be gigs.

But, I could easily reword it to make it REQUIRE gig, not gigs, or else its terrible grammar.

"I have a 500 gig hard drive." Translates to: "I have a 500 gigabyte hard drive." Not "I have a 500 gigabytes hard drive."

Same with "I have a 20 meg internet connection" 20 megabit, not megabits.

It's context-sensitive. You only including one specific context is bias. ;)
 

Chiropteran

Diamond Member
Nov 14, 2003
9,811
110
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teras

I hate the word "gigabyte", I don't know why. It just doesn't sound very high-tech to me. Glad we are moving into the age of terabytes, they sound much cooler.
 
Jul 10, 2007
12,041
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Originally posted by: destrekor
It does depend on context. In your specific examples, it would be gigs.

But, I could easily reword it to make it REQUIRE gig, not gigs, or else its terrible grammar.

"I have a 500 gig hard drive." Translates to: "I have a 500 gigabyte hard drive." Not "I have a 500 gigabytes hard drive."

Same with "I have a 20 meg internet connection" 20 megabit, not megabits.

It's context-sensitive. You only including one specific context is bias. ;)

well, 'gigabyte' and 'gigabytes' are context sensitive. the abbreviation of those 2 words are dependent on the unabbreviated versions.
so if you want to get technical, due to transitivity, it does.
 

hanoverphist

Diamond Member
Dec 7, 2006
9,867
23
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Originally posted by: torpid
Originally posted by: BlahBlahYouToo
i can't stand it when someone says 50 gig.
if you're abbreviating from gigabytes, it because gigs, not gig.

context is "50 gig(s) of space left on the drive"
which would you use?

Is this written or spoken? If written it would be 50gb. If spoken it would be 50 gigabytes. I think it's goofy to use the word "gig" with or without an s, unless you are talking about musical venues.

sometimes i call gigabytes giggles. as in "hey look, i got a 16 giggle thumb drive!" the use of "thumb drive" gets some IT folk all whiny as well.
 
Feb 19, 2001
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50 GIGS of space
50 GIG hard drive
50 GIGS worth of pr0n
50 GIG download

got it?

Edit: I got 4 gigs of ram. My old laptop only has 512 megs of ram. My desktop has 2 ters of space? WTF.