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got the necessary goods (intelligence, no emotional instability, strong will, no society dependencies, being alone doesn't bother me, wont miss nature or sunlight or people, can live underground with no problem)
160 publicly visible posts • joined 22 Aug 2008
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html
standards are created for a reason, lamons
if you dont know the difference between binary and decimal prefixes
thats a failed IT education right there, and you should ask your money back
(and beat up your dumb IT teacher too for being such a failure)
but i'm not surprised when there are still countries using body parts as measurement tools lmao.
1 TB formats as 1 TB, if your OS shows less, blame the OS for reporting incorrect values
and learn the difference between binary and decimal prefixes.
its 1000 GB with decimal prefixes but 931 GiB using binary prefixes (you cannot use decimal prefixes for binary numbers - learn the difference between GB and GiB)
1 TB = 1 000 000 000 000 bytes
my hdd is actually showing 1 000 201 977 856 bytes so in fact i've got 200 megs for free
tonne is not recognized by International System of Units (SI), proper SI unit for a tonne would be a "megagram" (7.7 million kg = 7 700 Mg = 7.7 Gg - gigagrams)
(ironically only three nations have not officially adopted the International System of Units as their primary or sole system of measurement: Liberia, Myanmar and United States - welcome to 21st century?)
its important to use international standards esp. in science and space research to avoid errors in calculations because of different systems of units (this already caused several critical failures)