this post was submitted on 19 Jan 2025
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Wait until they find out how much space is on their 2TB SSD...
That difference is because the drive manufacturer advertises capacity in Terabytes (or Gigabytes) and the operating system displays drive capacity in Tebibytes (or Gibibytes). The former unit is based on 1000 and the latter unit is based on 1024, which lets the drive manufacturer put a bigger number on the product info while technically telling the truth. The drive does have the full advertised capacity.
Hz are Hz though
Does anyone ever actually use those prefixes? I've personally just couched the difference into bytes vs bits.
Bytes vs bits is a completely different discrepency that usually comes up with bandwidth measurements.
So there are: Kilobytes, Kibibytes, Kilobits, and Kibibits