Bowco Computer Services

Bits'n'Bytes

As heard on CJCD

Click for Episode 1 - Prefixes
Click for Episode 2 - Memory
Click for Episode 3 - Operating Systems
Click for Episode 4 - Service Packs
Click for Episode 5 - Copying Programs
Click for Episode 6 - Copying Programs 2
Click for Episode 7 - Adware and Spyware
Click for Episode 8 - Wireless Protection
Click for Episode 9 - Power Issues
Click for Episode 10 - Safe Surfing
Click for Episode 11 - System Restore
Click for Episode 12 - Blogging
Click for Episode 13 - Email
Click for Episode 14 - Keyboard Shortcuts
Click for Episode 15 - Microsoft Features
Click for Episode 16 - Software Tools
Click for Episode 17 - File Systems
Click for Episode 18 - Pass it on
Click for Episode 19 - Cleaning
Click for Episode 20 - Laptop Protection
Click for Episode 21 - Webmail
Click for Episode 22 - Pop-ups
Click for Episode 23 - Website Addresses
Click for Episode 24 - Phishing
Click for Episode 25 - Buying a Computer
Click for Episode 26 - The Registry
Click for Episode 27 - CDs
Click for Episode 28 - DVDs

Episode 1

Good morning, and welcome to this week's installment of Bits 'n' Bytes - brought to you by Bowco Computer Services.

Today, I thought I'd talk about prefixes. A lot of people ask me, "Hey, Dave, is an 80 Gigabyte hard drive big?", or maybe, "128 Megabytes of RAM - that's a lot, right?"
Ever wonder what all these crazy prefixes: Kilo, Mega, Giga, and Tera all mean?
Well, they're all based on the decimal system, believe it or not. For example, a "byte" is one piece of data (not even equal to a single letter, in English). Now, from the metric system - every name change means you have to add three zeroes. So a "kilo"- byte is one thousand bytes and a megabyte is one million. For giga and tera, add three more zeroes each.
Byte Explanation
The funny thing is, not one of these prefixes is accurate, in computer-speak. Computers don't use decimal - they use what's called base2, or binary. So, computer numbers don't round off to a thousand or a million. But they're really close. A thousand 24 instead of 1000, and one million 48 thousand instead of an even million. Computer geeks have decided that these binary numbers are close enough to just use the decimal versions of the numbers - to avoid confusing people. Actually, I think it confuses people even more, but - that's the way they decided to do it.
Base 2
So, if you're so inclined, just remember the four different prefixes and you'll understand a little more about computers. Kilo has three zeroes, Mega has six, Giga, nine and Tera, twelve. It's not much, but it'll hopefully start you down the path of computer understanding.
Stay tuned next week for the second installation, "How Much Memory Do I Have?"
I'm Computer Dave, thanks for your time.

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