2009/7/7 Michael Pyne : > On Monday 06 July 2009 17:02:16 Marcel Partap wrote: >> > >The patch is wrong. >> > >This is the standard. >> > >Not doing it would be wrong. >> > >> > Which then must mean that we shouldn't have those units >> >> Very confusing indeed. IMHO there should be an option to switch between >> base 1000 and base 1024 units, for which clear conventions exist. > > NO ONE NEEDS BASE 10 UNITS. > > Just use KiB and be done with it.  Your "160 GB" hard disk will not ever hold > 160000000000 bytes in practice no matter what unit system you select in > KControl so it's hardly going to make the users feel any better. I don't want to continue the bikeshedding but I just want to recall a point that, as far as I can see, got lost in the discussion. The point is that: 1 KiB is 2.4% more than 1 kB 1 MiB is 4.9% more than 1 MB 1 GiB is 7.4% more than 1 GB 1 TiB is 10.0% more than 1 TB 1 PiB is 12.6% more than 1 PB The whole "1024 is close enough to 1000" thing dates back when people were only dealing with kilobytes. If people had been dealing with terabytes at that time, they probably would never had adopted that terminology, because a 10% difference matters to many more people than a 2.4% difference does. I'm just saying that even though the current approach of KDE may seem overly strict at the expense of familiarity to the user, in the long term it is the only solution, and the rest of software will eventually have to do the same. This isn't an argument against Michael's patch that may be useful to users today, i just wanted to get this point through. Cheers, Benoit