<--snip-->
> Usually they mean "binary" kilo and mega, although it is not proper in 
> aspect of IS standard. However this is different story: for example 
> every RAM manufacturer use MB and GB instead of correct MiB and GiB.

Probably because the "i" qualifier is relatively recent?  I do remember
Seagate and others using decimal capacities because it made their disks
appear bigger (e.g., 65K tracks rather than 64K).
<--snip-->


I would say that it is still so (the 160GB Samsung disk I bought has about
149 GiB capacity) and have never thought of "it made their disks appear
bigger" as a reason. Isn't that so because disk capacity is not base 2 (i.e.
base 1024) dependent?


<--snip-->
> BTW: In Europe we *say* "kilo" as abbreviation of "kilogram", but we
> *write* it properly: "kg", so assumption about kilograms is bad shot.

Perhaps in your neck of the woods, but I spent fourteen years in Austria and
saw plenty of stores with prices with just a K. And technically, it should
be Kg, not kg, because the convention is to capitalize multiplicative
prefixes.
<--snip-->


K instead of kg:  prices written manually with a chalk on small paper or
wooden surfaces? Or maybe it is normal to me and I just did/do not perceived
that? 

And I don't know what "technically" means in this context, but it is kg:

<URL: http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/units.html >

The smallest capitalized prefix is M for mega:

<URL: http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/prefixes.html >

Binary multiplicative prefixes are all capitalized.


-- 
Zaromil



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