k is 1000, K is 1024 ( 2 raised to the power 10)

Regarding mass and volume of water; the relationships a gallon weighs 10
lb, a litre weighs a kilogram can lead to inconsistencies because these are
defined at different temperatures.

Owen, isn't the therm still used?
The gas supply companies have gone away from the megajoule in favour of
kilowatt hours in order to show an apparent advantage over the electricity
supply companies, courtesy of the Second Law of Thermodynamics.

For energy from any source, the joule, named after the great James Prescott
Joule, of the brewing family, from the City of Salford, Lancashire, should
be made compulsory,

Brian of SpotMog

On Fri, Jun 22, 2012 at 8:47 AM, Johan Helsingius <[email protected]> wrote:

> David,
>
> > Sorry to be a pedant but it could cost you the answer in the pub quiz
> .One
> > kilobyte is 1012 Bytes and a gigabyte is 1012 megabytes
>
> 1024, actually. Or... it depends.
>
> To quote Wikipedia, "the term kilobyte and symbol kB or KB have
> historically
> been used to refer to either 1024 bytes or 1000 bytes, dependent upon
> context".
>
> And in the context of storage, storage device manufacturers tend to use
> the 1000 figure, because it makes their products seem larger-capacity than
> what they really are.
>
> > 10101001010 + 10110111001 is?
>
> 101100000011, of course. No harder than doing it in decimal, you just
> do the carry at 2 instead of 10. Of course, if you are one of the young
> whipper-snappers who had "reform mathematics" in school, it might be
> harder... :)
>
>        Julf
>



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