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![]() "Colin B." wrote in message ... In rec.audio.tech AZ Nomad wrote: On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 08:34:54 GMT, Colin B. wrote: In rec.audio.tech Pooh Bear wrote: mc wrote: You *can* have the exact same datastream with audible differences. What is the cause of the differences, then? That's like saying, "You can hit the exact same keys and not type the same words." I always though that it was a missed marketing opputunity that disk drive manufacturers didn't claim that *their* magnetic coatings could make your letters read better. Nah. The drive manufacturers have other ways of lying to the public. How much is a megabyte again? And how big is the cache on the drive? You think calling 1000000000 (10^9) bytes a gig is a form of lying? Never ascribe malice to what can be just a easily explained by ignorance and stupidity. Disk drive makers call 1000000 a million. Imagine that! Not 1024*1024. They also call 1000000000 a gig, not 1024^3. I do call that lying, given the context. Maybe you weren't paying attention when they made the change. For some decades, _all_ manufactures of computer equipment used kilo and mega to refer to intervals of 2^10. That was a de-facto standard before 8-bit words were standard. Hard drives were sold in megabytes, where 1MB=2^20B. Then when people were buying hard drives based on MB/$ and availability, one manufacturer changed their definition of a MB--I think it was Western Digital, but I'm not sure--to mean 1000000 bytes. Suddenly, they were selling drives that were about 5-7% bigger than the competitors, for the same price! Who wouldn't want free space? They didn't advertise it, but if you read the spec sheets you discovered the truth. The computer media went after them to find out, and they said that the marketing department recommended the idea, to 'avoid confusing the consumer' (by using the same units as everyone else? Sure!). Of course sales went up for them and down for the rest, so almost overnight, the switch was made. It's not ignorance or stupidity, it was clear and deliberate malice. In the context of the computer industry at the time, I still say it was lying. Grab lance, mount horse, tilt at windmills. It ain't a lie when the facts are well-known and readily knowable for everybody who cares to find out the accepted conventions. |
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