>Restore Windows 10, wants to make a backup on USB
>Must be 16gb usb stick
>Buy 16gb usb stick
>"lol nice try that stick is only 14.59gb even though its advertised as 16gb, you need actual 16gb"
O-ok...
>>56596831
It's do to with rounding from the conversion rates between power of 2 and power of 10 conversions e.g. mb to gb
>>56596831
To a hard disk manufacturer, one KB is 1000 bytes, one MB is 1000 KB, and one GB is 1000 MB. Essentially, if a hard disk is advertised as 500GB, it contains 500 * 1000 * 1000 * 1000 = 500,000,000,000 bytes of space. The hard disk manufacturer thus advertises the disk as a 500 GB hard disk.
However, manufacturers of RAM don’t sell it in even groups of 1000 – they use groups of 1024. When you’re buying memory, a KB is 1024 bytes, a MB is 1024 KB, and a GB is 1024 MB. To work back from the 500,000,000,000 bytes above:
500,000,000,000 / (1024*1024*1024) = 465.66 GB
-HTG
>>56597186
>>56597215
also on top of this, there's formatting so you lose even more space.
In response to OP, they want at least 16gb free space on a USB, so you need a 32gb usb. It's counter-intuitive I know
>says it needs 16gb
>buys a 16gb stick
This is all your fault OP
So buy a 32 GB, they can go as low as 5-7 USD.
Use 16 GB drive for Linux Live o save your maymay pictures.
>>56597215
is already pointing in the right direction.
when using the (correct) SI prefixes (k, M, G, ...), the following equalities obtain:
1 kB = 10^3 bytes = 1,000 bytes
1 MB = 10^6 bytes = 1,000,000 bytes
1 GB = 10^9 bytes = 1,000,000,000 bytes
however, since an amount of binary information is more sensibly summed up in powers of 2 (rather than in powers of 10), there also exist IEC prefixes, which are derived from the SI ones:
kilo (k) ≙ Kibi (Ki)
Mega (M) ≙ Mebi (Mi)
Giga (G) ≙ Gibi (Gi)
1 KiB = 1 Kibibyte = 2^10 bytes = 1,024 bytes
1 MiB = 1 Mebibyte = 2^20 bytes = 1,024^2 bytes = 1,048,576 bytes
1 GiB = 1 Gibibyte = 2^30 bytes = 1,024^3 bytes = 1,073,741,824 bytes
to make matters worse, Windows (at least according to this: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte#Vergleich) uses the SI prefixes, while the acutal numbers reported are those of the IEC ones, i.e., if Windows says 16 GB (= 16,000,000,000 bytes) it actually means 16 GiB (= 16 * 2^30 bytes = 17,179,869,184 bytes). So while you’re memory stick might not be actually 16 GiB large, it still is most certainly larger than 14.59 GB.
>>56596831
apparently, somebody already sued Wester Digital over this issue:
https://web.archive.org/web/20071016171124/http://wdc.com/settlement/docs/complaint.htm
>>56597835
good meme