Thread: hard drive size
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      10-10-2010, 12:13 AM   #5
radix
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Memphis1 View Post
"Raw unformatted capacity of a hard disk drive is usually quoted with SI prefixes (metric system prefixes), incrementing by powers of 1000; today that usually means gigabytes (GB) and terabytes (TB). This is conventional for data speeds and memory sizes which are not inherently manufactured in power of two sizes, as RAM and Flash memory are. Hard disks by contrast have no inherent binary size as capacity is determined by number of heads, tracks and sectors.
This can cause some confusion because some operating systems may report the formatted capacity of a hard drive using binary prefix units which increment by powers of 1024.
A one terabyte (1 TB) disk drive would be expected to hold around 1 trillion bytes (1,000,000,000,000) or 1000 GB; and indeed most 1 TB hard drives will contain slightly more than this number. However some operating system utilities would report this as around 931 GB or 953,674 MB. (The actual number for a formatted capacity will be somewhat smaller still, depending on the file system)."
It's easier to say 1TB = 931.32GiB, but yeah, you're right. I didn't even think about that considering the OP said the initial free space was 981GiB.


Code:
$ perl -le 'print 1000000000000 / 1024**3'
931.322574615479
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