http://blogs.cisco.com/news/the-dawn-of-the-zettabyte-era-infographic/
2/25/2012 3:47:17 AM
a cup of coffee to the great wall of china. That's quite a strange comparison to make.
2/25/2012 4:14:29 AM
i thought so too, but i guess for those volumes, those are the objects most people know about.you can substitute any number of things of roughly equal volume for the cup of coffee... but the great wall of china? not many things in the world with that much volume that many people are familiar with.
2/25/2012 4:22:49 AM
yeh, I wouldn't use the great wall; people know it's long, but people are too stupid to convert that to volume. they used a common volume estimator and a length estimator, bad form. They should use one of my favorite, brought to you by WRAL.... school buses!also, in 2015, VZW will still be charging $80 for 2gb
2/25/2012 8:15:41 AM
Also in 2015, I still will not be able to get high speed internet access where I live.
2/25/2012 9:12:35 AM
What a stupid article, the world will be gone in 2012
2/25/2012 10:02:38 AM
1) dude found a new word2) dude likes to make charts
2/25/2012 10:14:47 AM
By the time we get old, the world will have gone into the unofficial SI prefixes...Yottabyte (YB): 1000ZB, 10^24 BXennabyte (XB): 1000YB, 10^27 BWekabyte (WB): 1000XB, 10^30 BVendekabyte (VB): 1000WB, 10^33 BUdekabyte (UB): 1000VB, 10^36 B, or 10^18 EBThey can't go any higher with this pattern, because unlike the smaller prefixes, "T" is already taken by tera-; however, just FYI, "t" does stand for "treko-" which is 10^-39, 1000th of "udeko-"of course when dealing with data-storage, we more commonly use the binary-related prefixes (Microsoft uses the binary ones but claims they're the decimal ones), so like an udebibyte (UiB) would be 2^120 B, or about 1.329*10^36 B; similarly, 1UB is about 770.372ViB
2/25/2012 12:54:52 PM
I don't have an 11 oz cup of coffee on my desk.
2/25/2012 1:02:25 PM