[squid-users] (no subject)

Yuri yvoinov at gmail.com
Thu Dec 7 19:50:27 UTC 2017


Antonio, enough.

I do not believe that no one here has a sense of humor. Are you serious
about discussing it with animal seriousness?


08.12.2017 1:48, Antony Stone пишет:
> On Thursday 07 December 2017 at 20:43:52, Ing. Pedro Pablo Delgado Martell 
> wrote:
>
>> "In our kilobyte - one thousand twenty-four bytes."
>>
>> Your kilobyte???? Ok, let's move on, there is no point.
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilobyte
>
> "In historical usage in some areas of information technology, particularly in 
> reference to digital memory capacity, kilobyte denotes 1024 (2^10) bytes. This 
> arises from the powers-of-two sizing common to memory circuit design. In this 
> context, the symbols K and KB are often used."
>
> "The kilobyte has traditionally been used to refer to 1024 bytes (2^10 B), a 
> usage still common. The usage of the metric prefix kilo for binary multiples 
> arose as a convenience, because 1000 approximates 1024."
>
> "The binary representation of 1024 bytes typically uses the symbol KB, with an 
> uppercase letter K. The B is often omitted in informal use. For example, a 
> processor with 65,536 bytes of cache memory might be said to have "64K" of 
> cache. In this convention, one thousand and twenty-four kilobytes (1024 KB) is 
> equal to one megabyte (1 MB), where 1 MB is 1024^2 bytes."
>
> Hope that helps,
>
>
> Antony.
>

-- 
"Some people, when confronted with a problem, think «I know, I'll use regular expressions.» Now they have two problems."
--Jamie Zawinsk

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* C++: Bug to the future *
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