---
Particionei and formatted with 2 mb plus the maxtor, all in NTFS
1 9.76 2 Gb
25.5 Gb 3 39GB
h normal loss of space as well ---
Is normal but ... is that the manufacturers of HD's take as a basis to 1000 kilobytes = 1 megabyte, when in fact one megabyte equals 1024 kilobytes.
--- Yes it's true! the loss of space or best is not good to lose so you have to know exactly how much space on your HD ..
I think more that can give a little fight in the courts!! : P ---
Puts, is a drug, they sell hard drives with capacity in gigabytes instead of specifying in Gigabits. My 80GB after formatted remained with 74Gb. Gee, 6Gb lost, it can be missed! : Roll:
--- And to make matters worse is the damn clusters. : X ---
The size of hard drives is pure marketing. ---
You lose almost every 10G 1GB or more.
Heheh --- h akela history qto swiss cheese ... more cheese over the hole, and hole qto more or less cheese .... .... qto less cheese more cheese ... < BR> hehehe qto HD q greater the less you buy it will be
--- It seems that everybody's forgetting that a formatted disk is always smaller than the physical size. You need space to put mbr, fat, etc.. Just see the disks, their physical capacity is 2 MB, then formatted in the left with 1.44, and after windows is formatted with 1.38.
--- This is the scheme to show how a megabyte 1000KB of 1024KB in ves: wink: ---
to let the people revolted, when we think of hds 200 gigs, as we will lose
--- My brand 74.4Gb total space available, ie the 80 already lost 5.6 Gb So a HD 200 you will lose about 14GB. Wow ....
OBS, made an account straw per rule 3.
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