On Thursday 07 December 2017 at 20:34:22, Yuri wrote: > In our kilobyte - one thousand twenty-four bytes. :) This has been the definition since the earliest days of computing (or at least, as soon as any computer had 1024 of anything...) This (rather stupid-sounding, in my opinion) kibibyte stuff is a much more recently introduced term, and is basically only needed for marketing people. 2^10 is a much more natural quantity of anything to have in computer terms (since the whole system is based on binary) than 10^3 is, however 10^3 is a smaller number, therefore the marketing people can tell you that the product contains more of them. Antony. > 08.12.2017 1:29, Yuri пишет: > > https://i.imgur.com/bDw1O2b.png > > > > 08.12.2017 1:12, Ing. Pedro Pablo Delgado Martell пишет: > >> I have been reading about the difference between a KB and a KiB, > >> Kilobyte and Kibibyte respectively. According to several websites, > >> also Google, 1KB = 1000 bytes and 1KiB = 1024 bytes. However, you > >> guys say on /etc/squid/squid.conf this: > >> > >> "Units accepted by Squid are: > >> > >> bytes - byte > >> > >> KB - Kilobyte (*1024 bytes*) > >> " > >> > >> This email is not for criticize your work, I'm only looking for some > >> clearance because right now I'm confused about how Squid is really > >> measuring files. -- Software development can be quick, high quality, or low cost. The customer gets to pick any two out of three. Please reply to the list; please *don't* CC me. _______________________________________________ squid-users mailing list squid-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users