Actually the File system is important -- How do you know that the disk is actually less than 500 GB. Presumably you must have put some data on it or formatted it in some way. All file systems have directory overhead etc which reduce the amount of available DATA space on the disk.
Looking at the packaging of one of my older powered 500 GB USB ext drives I see that the spec refers to 500 GB Unformatted capacity and mentions that the actual amount may be less after formatting it.
The "Native" amount of the disk before you format it can probably be seen in your BIOS before the system boots into the OS.
The measurement here should refect the theoretical maximum capacity of the disk drive (it should show you details such as Sectors / heads / cylinders etc).
Cheers
jimbo
Formatted or non formatted, the capacity of the disk remains 500.000.000.000 bytes.
The fact that after formatting you can't see or use it all,
or that parts of it are occupied, does not change the physical properties of the drive.
The difference in size mentioned by manufacturers, and how it shows in windows has nothing,
I repeat nothing to do with formatting, nor filesystem, nor bios nor anything else.
Note that I am NOT talking about free space. I'm talking about capacity.
The first post of this thread shows you that the difference between advertised and reported by windows,
is because the whole industry (miss) uses 1024 for a kilobyte, and disk makers use 1000.
The calculation is watertight.
My Computer
At a glance
Win7 Build 7600 x86Pentium II 300MHz32mb EDO RAMDiamond Viper
- OS
- Win7 Build 7600 x86
- CPU
- Pentium II 300MHz
- Motherboard
- Asus
- Memory
- 32mb EDO RAM
- Graphics Card(s)
- Diamond Viper
- Sound Card
- Soundblaster 16
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 14" AOC CRT 16K color
- Screen Resolution
- 800x600
- Hard Drives
- 300mb Quantum fireball
- PSU
- 110 Watts
- Cooling
- Passive
- Keyboard
- Trust Ergonomic
- Mouse
- Generic
- Internet Speed
- 256K u 128K d
