Jelv's question was about the fact that for data stored on disc a kilobyte is 1024 bytes, a megabyte is 1024 kilobytes and a gigabyte is 1024 megabytes.
Connection and transmission speeds work with a kilobit being 1000 bits, a megabit being 1000 kilobits, and a gigabit being 1000 megabits.
Specially designed to confuse people

.
It becomes good fun when you see a download of a file being shown while running at
n kilobytes per second. Are they talking the number of storage kilobytes or the number of transmission kilobytes? I doubt if all meters use the same value, but in my opinion to be meaningful it has to be storage.
Then we have speed tests. They should use 1000. But when you run a test such as the thinkbroadband file downloads, what unit should they report in? It depends what the question is!
Using strict definitions, the time to download a 1GB file at 1Gbps is not 8 seconds. I'm assuming 8-bit bytes of course, otherwise it gets even more complex, and ignoring the protocol overheads. It is 8 x 1.024
3. (I think I have the exponent right!)
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