It strikes me that 'integrity in marketing' would dictate listing the 'user usable capacity' on the box.
Is there some valid reasoning behind this?
James
The reasoning is utterly valid.
"Integrity in marketing"
A non sequitur if ever I heard one and surely you jest.
Marketing 101 states that if 4 is good, then 5 is better.
If a 100 Watt stereo system is good, then surely a 200 Watt stereo system is better. Witness any audio retailer advertisement.
It follows that if 1000 is good, then 1024 is better, if .9313 is good, then 1.000 is better, and if 465 GB is good, then 500 GB is better.
Ad vomitum.
The measuring method is used because it is thought to be effective---a certain unknown percentage of rubes would shy away from a drive advertised at 465 GB and buy the adjacent drive measured at 500 GB, even though they have the same usable capacity.
The measuring method will be abandoned when it is thought not to be effective or when it is outlawed. Neither are on the horizon.
Can you imagine WD adopting the measuring method that yields 465 GB while Seagate continues to use the method that yields 500 GB? It won't happen as long as WD believes the rube census is greater than zero.
An appropriate assessment, I think. IOW (if I might 'boil it down'), profit driven, as suspected. But what's interesting is that today's world considers this 'valid reasoning'. I myself still consider such behavior corporate greed.
James
My Computer
At a glance
Win7U 64 RTMQ95508GB GskillASUS|EAH4850/HTDI/1GD3/A
- OS
- Win7U 64 RTM
- CPU
- Q9550
- Motherboard
- GA-EP45-UD3R
- Memory
- 8GB Gskill
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- ASUS|EAH4850/HTDI/1GD3/A
- Sound Card
- xfi Plat
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- Dell 2405fpw
- Screen Resolution
- 1920x1200
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- Seagate & WD sata Drives
- PSU
- Antec
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- MS Natural Ergonomic 4000
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