This is not specifically related to Cisco, but is a networking question.

I was having a mild argument yesterday with a PC/server type guy who was 
very irate at an ISP for using "gigabyte" to mean "1000 Megabytes" instead 
of "1024 Megabytes".  He appeared to think that throughout the IT 
industry, "K" always means 2 ^ 10, "M" always means 2 ^ 20, etc etc.  I 
pointed out that this is not always the case (64kbps = 64000 bps, for 
example), and haven't yet had a reply (I actually agree with him that the 
ISP is using the wrong definition, but I can see why they are).

However, it got me curious.  After a quick squizz through various sources, 
I couldn't find any that define the prefixes for networking usage. 

www.whatis.com has an interesting page on the prefixes, which basically 
backs up what I thought - roughly, storage (memory sizes etc) usually uses 
prefixes calculated in powers of two, while data transfer usually uses 
prefixes calculated in powers of ten. 

But is this codified anywhere?  For example, do the ethernet standards 
define "10 Mbps", or "1 Gbps" (Yes, I know about the IEEE site, but the 
standards don't seem to be currently downloadable)?

JMcL


Important:  This e-mail is intended for the use of the addressee and may
contain information that is confidential, commercially valuable or subject
to legal or parliamentary privilege.  If you are not the intended recipient
you are notified that any review, re-transmission, disclosure, use or
dissemination of this communication is strictly prohibited by several
Commonwealth Acts of Parliament.  If you have received this communication in
error please notify the sender immediately and delete all copies of this
transmission together with any attachments.




Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=46940&t=46940
--------------------------------------------------
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to