On Tue, 16 Mar 1999, Chuck McManis wrote:
  From Edupage:
 COMING TO TERMS WITH BYTES
 Computer terminology is becoming more precise: the International
 Electrotechnical Commission, which creates standards for electronic
 technologies, is adopting new prefixes to describe data values. The new
 term "kibibyte" will more accurately describe the number of bytes in a
 kilobyte -- rather than being 1,000, as could be inferred by the prefix
 "kilo," a kilobyte actually has 1,024 (2 to the 10th power) bytes. The
 metric prefixes currently employed -- kilo, mega, giga, etc. --
 accumulate as a power of 10, rather than the binary system used in
 computer code. Thus, the Commission will use kibi, mebi, gibi, tebi ,
 pebi and exbi to express exponentially increasing binary multiples (2 to
 the 10th power, 2 to the 20th power, etc.). "There was a need to
 straighten this out," says Barry Taylor of the National Institute of
 Standards and Technology.
 (Science 12 Mar 99) 
 
Great, let's solve an annoying but minor issue with a majorly annoying and
hard to pronounce prefix system.  Whoever came up with these should be
dragged out into the middle of the street and beat with a crowbar.  They
obviously watch too many children's television shows.  I don't know where
else one would come up with such stupid prefixes.
Sellam                                    Alternate e-mail: dastar(a)siconic.com
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Don't rub the lamp if you don't want the genie to come out.
                  Coming in 1999: Vintage Computer Festival 3.0
                   See 
http://www.vintage.org/vcf for details!
                        [Last web site update: 02/15/99]