Date: Tue, 05 Jan 2016 12:20:35 -0500 From: "Mikhail T." <mi+thun@aldan.algebra.com> To: Matt Churchyard <matt.churchyard@userve.net>, Bruce Evans <brde@optusnet.com.au> Cc: freebsd-fs <freebsd-fs@freebsd.org> Subject: Mb vs. MB (Re: NFS reads vs. writes) Message-ID: <568BFB63.5090203@aldan.algebra.com> In-Reply-To: <c1ab44c1859a422e8941c5ac09cea35f@SERVER.ad.usd-group.com> References: <8291bb85-bd01-4c8c-80f7-2adcf9947366@email.android.com> <5688D3C1.90301@aldan.algebra.com> <495055121.147587416.1451871433217.JavaMail.zimbra@uoguelph.ca> <568A047B.1010000@aldan.algebra.com> <CAGtEZUD28UZDYyHtHtzXgys%2Brpv_37u4fotwR%2BqZLc1%2BtK0dwA@mail.gmail.com> <20160105143542.X1191@besplex.bde.org> <568B574A.7010603@aldan.algebra.com> <c1ab44c1859a422e8941c5ac09cea35f@SERVER.ad.usd-group.com>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On 05.01.2016 05:45, Matt Churchyard wrote: > You have a different book to most then. > I've always understood 'b' to mean bits, and 'B' to mean bytes. While everyone on here will understand what you were trying to say in context, given purely that number, I would expect most people to interpret it as 90+Mb/s = ~11+MB/s. That is not what you meant, hence why Bruce said be careful with the units. I've always found "megabit" to be a useless unit, owning its entire existence to marketing liars trying to make their wares have more impressive numbers. Unless the conversation is about information theory, or CPU-registers and bitfields, any mention of "bit" is useless and misleading. And then, of course, there is the contention -- by the same liars -- that megabyte is one million bytes. My book ignores them too -- and so does yours, I'm sure. I wish, we agreed on "megabits" being just as useless as, say, a kilomile (kM?). The only good reason -- in my tattered book -- to capitalize the name of a measurement unit is when it is derived from a person's name: Hertz, Ampère, Röntgen, etc. Yours, -mi
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?568BFB63.5090203>