1. Fantastic...top 10 ?...Id say so...amazing....its hard to choose..I have seen PJ so many times,same goes for U2....

    Each show/tour is different....
  2. Toronto,09.11.11...is a great show..I only listed shows I was at....my 2 shows in Montreal ('05,'11) were also great...and I love that city....U2 were great there in July...
  3. Originally posted by RUMMY[..]

    Isn't it just 1000 GB? (sorry, math teacher) - or do these things deal with the binary system and powers of 2?


    No, it's 1024

    I should start making a wishsetlist for Stockholm.

    Have Pearl Jam ever opened a show with Better Man?


  4. I think we're both right according to the all-knowing wikipedia:

    Tera- (symbol: T) is a prefix in the metric system denoting 10^12 or 1000000000000.

    The prefix tera was was confirmed in 1960. In computer science tera can sometimes mean 1099511627776 (2^40) instead of 1000000000000, especially in the term terabyte. To avoid this ambiguity, the binary prefix tebi has been introduced to signify 2^40.

  5. Well, I thought we were talking about computers? terabyte.
  6. Alright...alright...I'll concede. You're a battler, Mr. Trek.
  7. I never give up, especially not when it's against a teacher Mwhahahahahaha.
  8. But wait....

    The terabyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information. The prefix tera means 10^12 in the International System of Units (SI), and therefore 1 terabyte is 1000000000000bytes, or 1 trillion (short scale) bytes, or 1024 gigabytes. 1 terabyte in binary prefixes is 0.9095 tebibytes, or 931.32 gibibytes. The unit symbol for the terabyte is TB or TByte, but not Tb (lower case b) which refers to terabit.

    What's this "short scale" stuff?
  9. Originally posted by RUMMYAlright...alright...I'll concede. You're a battler, Mr. Trek.


    Sorry, I've already won. The above text is confusing.
  10. Just for that comment I'll be marking my Advanced Functions exams extremely hard. Thirty Canadian students will have have a bounty out for a young man known as "Mr. Trek."
  11. Since you were "confused:"

    In standard SI usage, 1 terabyte (TB) equals 1000000000000bytes = 1000^4, or 10^12 bytes.
    Using the traditional binary interpretation, a terabyte is 1099511627776bytes = 10244 = 240 bytes = 1 tebibyte (TiB).
  12. Interesting addition to our earlier debate (which I prematurely conceded but that doesn't mean I should stop searching for the truth):

    http://www.whatsabyte.com/

    Sorry, Jammers. I'll stop ruining our thread (and embarrassing myself) now.