https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=350633
Martin Vahi <martin.v...@softf1.com> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |martin.v...@softf1.com --- Comment #1 from Martin Vahi <martin.v...@softf1.com> --- By year 2015 there were already 2 standards. 1MB=1000^2 bytes 1MiB = (2^10)^2 bytes = 1024^2 bytes To be totally precise, 1Mb stands for 1000^2 bits, not bytes and SRAM sizes for embedded devices is still often given in bits, not bytes, in year 2018, but I assume that You meant 898MB, not the 898Mb. A question is, how big the ISO file really is? If it is 898MB, then an 900MB CD-R might do, but if it is 898MiB = 898*1024*1024B = 941621248B ~ 942MB then the 900MB CD-R will be too small. Back in the day the 1MiB was displayed as 1MB. May be the GUI for evaluating the file size used the old notation and displayed 898MB in stead of 898MiB. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mebibyte -- You are receiving this mail because: You are watching all bug changes.