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Krill
Registered: Apr 2002 Posts: 2969 |
Renamed release titles and nomenclature
Okay, so i noticed that somebody, or something, keeps renaming titles such that the amount of bytes, say "[64B]", is changed to "[64b]".
As ZeSmasher once correctly pointed out, there is this pretty much universal convention of abbreviating bytes to B and bits to b.
Now, who or what renames those titles? Why? What is this OCD shit?
Somebody, please clarify. |
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Joe
Registered: Apr 2002 Posts: 226 |
Oh! Absolutely, I've stepped on your toes before, sorry about that. Love those phrasing though, keeping it. I'll stay in the back perhaps learning something about language and how moderators think and choose stuff around here simply. |
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JackAsser
Registered: Jun 2002 Posts: 2014 |
May I suggest not to abbreviate it, just to avoid confusion. Then one can choose the most aesthetic style and still be clear to the meaning:
64 bits
64 Bits
64 bytes
64 Bytes
But that might be way to pragmatic.. ;) |
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Krill
Registered: Apr 2002 Posts: 2969 |
+1 |
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chatGPZ
Registered: Dec 2001 Posts: 11352 |
what jackasser said, but replace "bytes" by "beers"! |
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Bitbreaker
Registered: Oct 2002 Posts: 504 |
and p stands for POOP. |
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Mr. SID
Registered: Jan 2003 Posts: 424 |
The french would use "o". |
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Joe
Registered: Apr 2002 Posts: 226 |
Destroying this thread just as any. Hahaha
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CaMDZ9M5WKg |
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Krill
Registered: Apr 2002 Posts: 2969 |
Quoting Mr. SIDThe french would use "o". I've always liked how the French language calls bytes "octets", as this is unambiguous. Because a byte didn't always consist of 8 bits, historically across all kinds of computing machinery. For some reason, that term has been replaced by the somewhat less correct, but more flashy "byte" in all the other western-European languages. :) |
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