The reason may not be as Technical as I thought. Computers operate with
binary math therefore 2^1000=1024 per this article;
http://pc.net/helpcenter/answers/why_1024_bytes
On 04/08/2016 03:28 AM, Chuck Norcutt wrote:
See <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilobyte> which says we old guys
still don't do it right. 1024 bytes should be called a kibibyte to
differentiate from 1000 bytes, a kilobyte. That was decided in 1998
but I've never heard of it until now. Clearly not very popular.
Chuck Norcutt
On 4/7/2016 6:45 PM, Larry Griffin via olympus wrote:
Chuck, I don't doubt that you are right on your math, I was just hoping
for something in the Ballpark. When I started to do the math I realized
I'd forgotten how to deal with the large numbers hadn't done it in 20
years. IIRC (and that seems to be doubt :(^) there is a technical reason
for the 1024 and it has been with us since 64k system. Remember how we
could do with just 64k of memory on the mother board.
Larry G
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