[AusNOG] [SAGE-AU Discuss] [RESULTS] Straw poll: what is your email message size limit?
Christopher Mclean
cjm at ausoptic.com
Wed Mar 27 09:29:25 EST 2013
4 bits were always referred to as a nibble
From: ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net [mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] On Behalf Of Lloyd Wood
Sent: Tuesday, March 26, 2013 4:58 PM
To: Narelle; Paul Gear
Cc: ausnog at lists.ausnog.net
Subject: Re: [AusNOG] [SAGE-AU Discuss] [RESULTS] Straw poll: what is your email message size limit?
> Bytes are 8 bits. Always were, always will be.
Um, no. You are probably too young to remember 4-bit and 6-bit bytes and other popular word sizes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte
> Even the worst pedants will accept variations on the use of K (1024
> also Kelvin) for k (1000) as often these are misused.
Um, no. That's why the worst pedants developed
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_1541
Lloyd Wood
lloyd.wood at yahoo.co.uk<mailto:lloyd.wood at yahoo.co.uk>
http://sat-net.com/L.Wood
________________________________
From: Narelle <narellec at gmail.com<mailto:narellec at gmail.com>>
To: Paul Gear <ausnog at libertysys.com.au<mailto:ausnog at libertysys.com.au>>
Cc: ausnog at lists.ausnog.net<mailto:ausnog at lists.ausnog.net>
Sent: Tuesday, 26 March 2013, 15:38
Subject: Re: [AusNOG] [SAGE-AU Discuss] [RESULTS] Straw poll: what is your email message size limit?
On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 1:49 PM, Paul Gear <ausnog at libertysys.com.au<mailto:ausnog at libertysys.com.au>> wrote:
> A soft summary: it seems that those of us on 10 MB or less are behind the
> times, mostly thanks to gmail.
> I'd also like to publish some of the comments i received off-list. Because
> i said i would summarise the results for the lists, i'm going to assume that
> anyone who emailed me directly will be happy to be quoted anonymously.
{begin grumble}
Are you going to include some meta analysis like the number of
"techies" that use units incorrectly whilst also claiming to be
authoritative?
MB vs mb - the latter always means millibits.
Bytes are 8 bits. Always were, always will be.
Anything else will render their meaning bit set to 0.
Even the worst pedants will accept variations on the use of K (1024
also Kelvin) for k (1000) as often these are misused.
{end grumble}
PS I note a certain large ISP has just announced a cloud based email
service with 30MB of outgoing message size and 3GB of storage.
--
Narelle
narellec at gmail.com<mailto:narellec at gmail.com>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.ausnog.net/pipermail/ausnog/attachments/20130326/958f07f1/attachment.html>
More information about the AusNOG
mailing list