6
spl0
8y

When a 1Tb disk is really 890Gb...

Over 100Gb lost - thats a lot!

Comments
  • 7
    That's the difference between 1TB and 1TiB. A TB is calculated as 1B*1000*1000*1000*1000, where a TiB is 1B*1024*1024*1024*1024.

    OSes commonly measure in KiB/MiB/GiB/TiB and storage manufacturers measure in KB-TB. It's a bit of a con on the less techie people.
  • 3
    @sheeponmeth
    IT people should know this
  • 1
    @Linux I agree, but not all IT people deal with storage first hand, so it can be a while before they come across it.
  • 2
    @sheeponmeth
    but all IT people has bought a USB stick ;)
  • 1
    @Linux, you're taking away my ability to be nice. I'm trying to give them the benefit of the doubt, but you're ruining it all. I guess some people just aren't perceptive enough to notice.
  • 2
    I feel this is a con storage manufacturer do to sell hardrives.
  • 1
    it need index and other stuff
  • 0
    @sheeponmeth Even thats 931GB - wheres the other 40GB gone?

    I've seen this for years (first noticed on a 5MB TRS-80 Winchester Disk! :)) but its obviously more noticeable on today's bigger drives!
  • 1
    @Linux we know and we still rant!
  • 1
    @spl0 Is it possibly to due formatting? And maybe a recovery partition is taking that up?
  • 0
    @sheeponmeth Could be formatting... dont think theres a recovery partition on there! This is on a NAS and being used as a cache, so not sure what its doing underneath tbh!
  • 0
    @spl0 Is it an HDD or SSD?
  • 0
    @sheeponmeth SDD that one!
  • 1
    @spl0 That's likely it, then, double check that it is in fact a 1TB and not a 960GB. Also, SSDs use additional space for internal management, so it could be that instead of providing additional nand for the overhead they just use part of the 1TB for it.
  • 1
    Also the file table/index of whatever file system youre using take up space too.
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