Image:Windows XP Drive Properties for 160 GB disk.png

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Description

Windows XP's Drive Properties window, showing information for a Seagate external USB hard drive. Windows XP uses SI prefixes in a binary sense to report sizes. The drive can hold 160 GB (160,041,885,696 bytes), and is presented by Windows as "152625 MB". In this case, "MB" is used to mean 1,048,576 (220) bytes.

Source

Created by User:Omegatron using the GIMP

Date

2007-04-12

Author

User:Omegatron

Permission
(Reusing this image)

All of these images are derived from the same physical hard drive:

[edit] Fair use in Binary prefix

  • This screenshot succinctly shows the seemingly inconsistent decimal and binary measurements of hard disk capacity.
  • This image shows the problem with an actual dialog screen that a non-technical reader has likely seen.
  • This image supports a major topic in the Binary prefix article.
  • Using this utilitarian dialog does not deprive the copyright holder, Microsoft, of any revenue or sales.
  • The dialog is similar to the thousands of dialogs the software industry has created using the Microsoft Foundation Class Library (MFC) toolkit for tabbed dialogs. Microsoft allows reuse with no copyright restrictions on the resulting dialogs and programs.
  • This use also meets most of the criteria on Use of Microsoft Copyrighted Content, which grants permission to use screenshots in documents or websites.

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeDimensionsUserComment
current04:17, 12 April 2007534×547 (10 KB)Omegatron (Talk | contribs)

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