Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
- Joined
- Jan 28, 2012
- Messages
- 13,178 (2.76/day)
- Location
- Concord, NH, USA
System Name | Apollo |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Core i9 9880H |
Motherboard | Some proprietary Apple thing. |
Memory | 64GB DDR4-2667 |
Video Card(s) | AMD Radeon Pro 5600M, 8GB HBM2 |
Storage | 1TB Apple NVMe, 4TB External |
Display(s) | Laptop @ 3072x1920 + 2x LG 5k Ultrafine TB3 displays |
Case | MacBook Pro (16", 2019) |
Audio Device(s) | AirPods Pro, Sennheiser HD 380s w/ FIIO Alpen 2, or Logitech 2.1 Speakers |
Power Supply | 96w Power Adapter |
Mouse | Logitech MX Master 3 |
Keyboard | Logitech G915, GL Clicky |
Software | MacOS 12.1 |
It's not really lying because the math actually does work out. The reason is because manufacturers base capacity off of a metric representation of size where 1000 bytes = 1 kilobyte where computers are basing it off powers of 2 which means that computers read 1024 bytes as 1 kilobyte (or more accurately 1kibibyte.) The fine print literally says this on hard drive packaging. Often, you're buying 2TB not 2TiB and that hard drive capacity is measured as a decimal representation not a binary one.I already know that as do 99.9% of users visiting these forums (or atleast they should) but Drive manufactures still seem to persist with the lie and reviewers shouldn't still be falling for their BS and state the real formated capacity instead of the fairy tale that HDD/SSD manufacturers say they are then maybe they'd pick up their game and actually produce drives of the capacity they say they are
So lets say you have a 2TB drive, when you plop it into a computer. You'll see 1.819TB. That's because (2TB * (1000^4)) / 1024^4 = 1.819TiB. So the computer reads it as 1.819TiB (although, it's not usually telling you it's the binary representation,) but, it's still 2TB. Formatted or not, it's still a 2TB/1.819TiB drive. This has literally been the way things have been for decades.