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mrgreen4242

macrumors 601
Feb 10, 2004
4,377
9
Rainydays is correct, and for future reference, you can multiply the advertised size by .925 and get a good approximation of actual formatted usable size.
 

rainydays

macrumors 6502a
Nov 6, 2006
886
0
Rainydays is correct, and for future reference, you can multiply the advertised size by .925 and get a good approximation of actual formatted usable size.

Yeah, unless the disk capacity actually is correctly specified. I was surprised to find that the 140GB HDD I bought for my MacBook actually was 140GB :) But it's a rarity these days.
 

l33r0y

macrumors 6502
Aug 7, 2007
288
0
hey guys, just a quick one.....

just wondered what size exactly the 500GB drives in the new iMacs format to?

cheers

It is universal to any storage medium on any platform where manufacturers quote a Gigabyte (incorrectly) as 1000MB instead of 1024MB.

So to find the true amount, just multiple the given amount by 0.931

A gigabyte hard disk formats to 931GB - which looks terrible, doesn't it ?! :)
 

mkrishnan

Moderator emeritus
Jan 9, 2004
29,776
15
Grand Rapids, MI, USA
It is universal to any storage medium on any platform where manufacturers quote a Gigabyte (incorrectly) as 1000MB instead of 1024MB.

This really never goes anywhere; the prefix giga means 10^9 in all other contexts, which would suggest that its the storage media people who are correct, and the operating system people who are incorrect. It's not really ultimately an issue of correct or incorrect. They just use two traditional (but different) definitions.
 
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