Originally posted by: E equals MC2
Originally posted by: sdifox
get over it...it is not the hardware maker's fault.
THEN? They make the drives and packaging but the numbers NEVER register as advertised in neither windows or mac platform.
You guys need to calm down. I know how the numbering differs. But that doesn't excuse the makers to to be misleading.
At the end of the fvcking day, that 200 GB an avg consumer bought as written on the box is just 176~. WTF do you call that?
Originally posted by: torpid
I thought the monitor issue was that some monitors have a non viewable area on the screen itself, not that they were including the housing...
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: torpid
I thought the monitor issue was that some monitors have a non viewable area on the screen itself, not that they were including the housing...
it was an issue with tube size vs viewable area. In the US, TVs had to be labelled 27" if the viewable area is 27" even if the tube is 29".
Originally posted by: torpid
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: torpid
I thought the monitor issue was that some monitors have a non viewable area on the screen itself, not that they were including the housing...
it was an issue with tube size vs viewable area. In the US, TVs had to be labelled 27" if the viewable area is 27" even if the tube is 29".
Isn't that the same thing I said, or is there some difference that I don't understand?
Originally posted by: theprodigalrebel
I guess that's the difference between MB/GB and MiB/GiB.
i've never heard of measuring screen size by adding in the border.
A 17" CRT, for instance, typically says 16" viewable. I do remember a 15" CRT that said 13.8" viewable. LCDs are measured differently (i.e. correctly).
Originally posted by: daveshel
It all started with lumber. Ever measure a 2x4?
Originally posted by: daveshel
It all started with lumber. Ever measure a 2x4?
Originally posted by: Mrvile
Originally posted by: pontifex
isn't it still the same reason for HDs? i forget thew exact reason, but its like how the pc reads the drive or something?
i've never heard of measuring screen size by adding in the border.
Yeah back when CRT monitors were the shit, they measured the monitors including the borders (CRT monitors had big borders). I have a 17" CRT monitor back home which actually only has a ~15" viewing screen.
Originally posted by: SSSnail
It's not the drives manufacturer, if you know CHS (or LBA), they don't lie. It's the formating that's taking up that space.
Originally posted by: Foxery
Originally posted by: SSSnail
It's not the drives manufacturer, if you know CHS (or LBA), they don't lie. It's the formating that's taking up that space.
This is not true at all. Space taken do to "Formatting", really meaning the File System, is negligible on modern drives. This hasn't been a viable excuse since the days of floppy disks, when 30KB was a big deal.
This started decades ago, possibly as a marketing gag, or possibly just by accident since the difference wasn't a big margin of error in the early days. Compare:
100,000 bytes and 100KB
102,400 actual bytes
This is a lot less noticeable than the difference between:
100,000,000,000 bytes and 100GB
107,374,182,400 actual bytes.
As I like to shout at work sometimes,
MATH!!!!!
<inhale>
No one is willing to be first in changing it, because it'll make their products appear to suddenly be "smaller." This will continue to confuse noobs until the end of time.
Originally posted by: DisgruntledVirus
Originally posted by: daveshel
It all started with lumber. Ever measure a 2x4?
You are telling me a 2x4 really isnt 2 inches by 4 inches?
The revelations revealed in this thread are epic wins for sure
/end sarcasm
Originally posted by: Modelworks
Originally posted by: DisgruntledVirus
Originally posted by: daveshel
It all started with lumber. Ever measure a 2x4?
You are telling me a 2x4 really isnt 2 inches by 4 inches?
The revelations revealed in this thread are epic wins for sure
/end sarcasm
Exactly.
Though I have worked on a few houses that were old enough to have actual 2X4 lumber.
Originally posted by: E equals MC2
Originally posted by: sdifox
get over it...it is not the hardware maker's fault.
THEN? They make the drives and packaging but the numbers NEVER register as advertised in neither windows or mac platform.
You guys need to calm down. I know how the numbering differs. But that doesn't excuse the makers to to be misleading.
At the end of the fvcking day, that 200 GB an avg consumer bought as written on the box is just 176~. WTF do you call that?
It's a man thing to overstate the size of our lumber. Same thing for our hard-drives.Originally posted by: daveshel
It all started with lumber. Ever measure a 2x4?
Originally posted by: waggy
heh yeah i was going to say 2x4 used to actually be 2 inches by 4 inches!
