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Re: [Bug-ddrescue] Math and Prefixes


From: Antonio Diaz Diaz
Subject: Re: [Bug-ddrescue] Math and Prefixes
Date: Thu, 18 Jan 2007 17:41:08 +0100
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i586; en-US; rv:1.7.11) Gecko/20050905

Hello Ariel,

Ariel wrote:
To me it's obvious that it's 1000*1000^whatever
By that same logic you could invent a new system (the very-short scale?) 
using 100*100^whatever. Or even more bizarre ones.
See it this way:
One names small numbers in terms of units. To name the number beyond 9 a new name is required, ten.
Then one names numbers in terms of number of tens plus the remainder. To 
name the number beyond 99 a new name is required, a hundred.
Then one names numbers in terms of number of hundreds plus the remainder 
of tens plus the remainder. To name the number beyond 999 a new name is 
required, a thousand.
Then one follows with tens of thousands and hundred of thousands, but 
beyond 999 999 a new name is required, a million.
Then one follows with tens of millions, hundreds of millions, thousands 
of millions, tens of thousands of millions and hundreds of thousands of 
millions, but beyond 999 999 999 999 a new name is required, a billion.
Then one follows with tens of billions, hundreds of billions, thousands 
of billions, tens of thousands of billions and hundreds of thousands of 
billions, but beyond 999 999 999 999 999 999 a new name is required, a 
trillion.
And so on.

Billiards and the like are never needed. One may simply use thousand billions, thousand trillions, etc.
From my point of view, using billion to mean thousand million is pure 
laziness. See this quote from the Oxford dictionary 
(http://www.askoxford.com/asktheexperts/faq/aboutwords/billion?view=uk):
-------------------------
Once the business world and the financial press found themselves discussing `thousand millions' so much, the 'American' system simply became more convenient, despite a certain lack of logical tidiness. (A 'British' trillion is the third power of a million, while the 'American' one is the fourth power of a thousand, and the 'American' system continues out of sync with the arithmetic).
-------------------------


But, back to the subject at hand since we are talking about computers here, can't you just use K, M, G?
If I use k to mean 1024, what may I use to mean 1000? It is not 
impossible that in the future the sector size of some devices don't be a 
power of 2.

Regards,
Antonio.




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