Windows 10 data calculator

It says 32b bytes is 32GB

Attached: WIN10CALC.jpg (322x534, 28K)

ok?

They are colluding with HDD manufacturers and using base 1000 instead of 1024 to jew you out of your gigabytes.

Not knowing GiB

This is why you must never hire Indians

Retina Display doesn't have this problem

install gentoo

> the screenshot shows that it distinguishes between decimal and binary prefixes (Tb, Ti)

Attached: 1518643604353.png (1440x810, 1.36M)

This. RAM companies are still honest.

Yes. This is the definition. giga = 10^9.

Why, when you enter input in BYTES and convert to to gigaBYTES, does it show teraBITS and tebiBITS

Not OP but why didn't they do it for gigabois aswell?

He has to select gibibytes instead of gigabytes.

Back to 9gag

>autism

>price fixing
>honest

Wew lad

>not knowing the difference between decimal and binary

Attached: 5D1B4DCC-4F7D-4109-83B0-62AAFE0247DA.jpg (165x115, 5K)

Decimal is used for numbers outside of computing.

It's actually correct, retard.

Attached: 1526342437334.jpg (800x450, 37K)

I believe the point he is trying to make is that Windows displays Gibibytes as Gigabytes.
But I could be wrong.

So, it says that 32*10^9 bytes is actually 32 Gigabytes. What's wrong? 10^9 is literally the definition of Giga.

>buy 8GB module
>install it
>open system monitor
>7.7GB
Sasuga

Probably hardware reserved. What's your task manager show? I've got 63.8 MB of hardware reserved memory on my 8 GB so it shows 7.9 GB for me. I can't imagine why 300 MB would be reserved though unless you've got a pre-D3D11 graphics card or you've got an iGPU.

Operating Systems use GebiBytes GiB.
Disk Manufacturers and Carriers use GigaBytes GB.

RAM Producers use GebiBytes GiB.

Your integrated GPU might be taking a 256mb of RAM.

Attached: ccc.jpg (947x799, 104K)

oh fuck that calculator is beautiful