@yadayadayada the even sadder part is that Windows transfer estimates were never correct. Downloading ~23 PB at even 100 KBps would take 8K+ years!
@hallmarc A confession to make: I find comprehending the size of a PB daunting - much like at first understanding and making sense of a gigabit and then a terabit. It's getting harder to keep up :(
@Pat_Walrond @yadayadayada it helps if you break it down into powers of two. 1 MiB = 2²⁰ bytes, 1 GiB = 2³⁰ bytes, 1 TiB = 2⁴⁰ bytes, and so on. No need for the layperson to know the actual number. Each "level" is 1,024 times as many bytes as the previous one. A MiB is actually called a "mebibyte" and it's distinct from "MB" but in today's world most people use them interchangeably. 1 MB = 10⁶ bytes, 1 GB = 10⁹ bytes, etc.
@Pat_Walrond @yadayadayada I REMEMBER. I was there with you in spirit 😉.
@Pat_Walrond @yadayadayada the thing I remember the most about the early hard drives was the sound, when spinning up and when seeking.