Zonkd
Very Senior Member
When I don't understand something, I try to research as much as possible. Here's an interesting web page which shows "hard drive size" vs. "actual capacity". Seems I have a 2 TB HD as advertised, with an actual capacity of 1.862 TB. If I understand right, it's because there's 1,024 as the base instead of 1,000 when converting bytes to GB.
http://www.ussscctv.com/hdccalc.html
I'm glad you enjoy the challenge.
Yes all manufacturers technically misadvertise the true storage capacity of the drives (in the mind of the buyer). They argue it's to avoid confusing the public. Note 1 Tebibyte is not the same as 1 Terabyte. If you think you're buying a 2 Terabyte HDD, no, you're actually buying a 2 Tebibyte HDD (the manufacturer does state this in the fine print on the box in-store). Windows measures disk capacity in Tebibytes. So when you check the disk size in Windows your 2TB harddrive will actually be smaller than you thought it'd be. Ultimately you're still getting what you pay for. 2 Tebibytes is 2000 Gibibytes. If you want more Gigibytes you should buy more Tebibytes.
The fact is a “terabyte”, according to standards, is a trillion bytes or a thousand gigabytes. Although many may use 1 TB to mean 1024 GB, the standard (which helps alleviate confusion for all of us) states that only 1 TiB is 1024 GiB and that 1 TB is 1000 GB. - Source
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