It appears windows does not cnform to the standard method of calculating file size. e.g. the standard value of 1GB is 1000MB, however windows uses 1024MB. As such it is not in fact a "Gigabyte" But a "Gibibyte". This is extremley annoying, as for egxample, I have a 2TB hard Drive, which in the settings tells me is: 2,000,263,573,504 bytes, this is correct, however it also tells me that the hard drive is 1.81TB when it should say 2TB. Is there any way I can change windows's calculation method for file sizes? So that 1TB = 1,000,000,000,000 bytesinstead of 1,099,511,627,776 byte which is a TiB (or tebibyte) This is probably a very stupid question and pointless, but if anyone can help\knows what to do I will appreciate it.
My Computer
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Me :)
- OS
- Windows 7 Ultimate x64
- CPU
- Intel Core i7 970 @3.33GHz
- Motherboard
- Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD5
- Memory
- Kingstong 12GB (3x4GB) DDR3 @1,600 MHz
- Graphics Card(s)
- Gigabyte Nvidia GTX-570 1280MB GDDR5
- Monitor(s) Displays
- BenQ E2420HD 24" FULL HD 2ms response
- Hard Drives
- Maxtor 300GB SATA2
Saegate 500GB SATA2
Hitachi 1TB SATA2
Saegate 2TB SATA3
- PSU
- Thermaltake EVO-BLUE 750w
- Case
- Thermaltake Soprano DX
- Cooling
- Thermaltake SPIN-Q