1-10 of 11 Answers
The reason has to do with math and marketing. Humans think about numbers in base 10, the decimal numeral system. Computers, on the other hand, think in base 2, the binary numeral system. Herein lies the root of the issue. The “brilliant” marketing people at data storage companies decided early on that all their products should be marketed in the decimal system. Therefore, one megabyte on their products is equal to 1,000,000 bytes, and one gigabyte is equal to 1,000,000,000 bytes. To a computer, a megabyte is 1,048,576 bytes and a gigabyte is 1,073,741,824 bytes. For each gigabyte advertised in base 10, you’re actually receiving about 70 megabytes less than a gigabyte in base 2. Imagine if they pulled that with things like gasoline...people would be livid. Hope that explains it...
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Check this out: "PNY defines 1GB as 1,000,000,000 bytes; however, a computer defines 1GB as more than 1GB at 1,073,741,824. If you divide the announced density by the computer’s 1GB definition, you will get the available space. For example: 64,000,000,000 (64GB) divided by 1,073,741,842 = 59.6GB of available space." Source: PNY Website - Support/USB/FAQs
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.That's normal, you always have a few Gigs less..Windows is using binary units. That’s why this confusion comes up. Windows measures in 1024 chunks where as hard drive manufacturers measure in 1000 chunks. So your 128gb drive shows up in windows as 120gb..this has been going on for a long time, hard drives have the same issue..any storage device really running in Windows. No worries.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.It has to do with the way Windows displays and measures bytes. The manufacturers measure drive size at 1K=1000 bytes and Windows displays it at 1K=1024 bytes. So to Windows a 128gb drive = 128 x 1000 x 1000 x 1000 / 1024 /1024 /1024 = which is approx 119GB
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.A gigabyte is 1,073,741,824 bytes...not an even 1,000,000...so when you calculate the size it will always be a smaller number. look at your picture, the free space is 129 million bytes, not 120
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Formatting the drive always takes some space. That's standard for any type of drive.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.because of formatting
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Not all Usb's are Created equal, for example Mine has 129
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.All external Drives use some space for various reasons. Partitioning the drive etc. However, with this particular Drive when I plugged it into my old USB Computer and loaded several photos in a New Folder mine still says 120gb available. Hope this helps!
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Some of the in any flash card memory is always used to enable the device. If you buy a 128 SSD computer, you won't have 128 GB of storage because some is used to run the computer. How much storage should be actually necessary for a simple device like a flash card? I don't know, but when you look at capacity in GBs, you never get the full amount.
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