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Posted

I just connected a new 1 TB HD into my pc, but it doesn't show up in My Computer. It got detected upon startup though. I went to configuration > hardware, and the HD appeared in the list of hardware, and it even said it's working correctly, but still I can't access it. The computer is running XP.

Posted (edited)

No that's not the problem.

 

I've found my way to control panel > performance and maintenance > computer management > disk management, and initialised the disk. But there seems to be more to it. It says it's not assigned. Is that what needs to be done, and if so, how?

Edited by Pope
Posted (edited)

Also, why do hard disks always lie about their size? When I bought a 250GB HD, it actually was only 230. With a 500GB HD, it was 455. Now with this 1TB HD, it's 930 (so it says in the menu mentioned above).

Edited by Pope
Posted
No that's not the problem.

 

I've found my way to configuration > system management > computer management > storage devices > storage device management (not sure if those are the correct English terms though), and initialised the disk. But there seems to be more to it. It says it's not assigned. Is that what needs to be done, and if so, how?

 

That's weird. Have you perhaps tried installing the drivers from the CD that came with it?

Posted
Also, why do hard disks always lie about their size? When I bought a 250GB HD, it actually was only 230. With a 500GB HD, it was 455. Now with this 1TB HD, it's 930 (so it says in the menu mentioned above).

 

They don't really lie. It stems from the difference in definitions of prefixes.

 

Standard definitions:

 

Kilo = 1,000

Mega = 1,000,000

Giga = 1,000,000,000

Tera = 1,000,000,000,000

 

Therefore, in standard terminology Terabyte is 1,000,000,000,000 bytes.

 

In computing terminology, however, each new prefix is defined by being a positive integer in 2^10n, so:

 

Kilobyte = 1,024 bytes

Megabyte = 1048576 bytes

Gigabyte = 1073741824 bytes

Terabyte = 1099511627776 bytes

 

(Note, this terminology has now been officially replaced to avoid confusion with lame names, such as Gigibyte...)

 

Hence, your HDD probably has 1,000,000,000,000 bytes, which is 1TB in standard terminology, but in the old, but still widely used computing terms, this only amounts to 909.4947017729282379150390625 computer Gigabytes (Gigibytes).

Posted
I think I might've found it. I selected to add a new partition. I could then assign a letter, and now it's formatting.

This seems to have done it.

 

Thx for the help anyway. :)

Posted
Cool now go buy another TB HDD! 2TB FTW!!

 

Do these even exist at this point in time?!?!

Seagate makes some nice 1.5TB drives. Get 2 of those and you are covered for the next 6-12 months :huh:

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Posted
Cool now go buy another TB HDD! 2TB FTW!!

 

Do these even exist at this point in time?!?!

Seagate makes some nice 1.5TB drives. Get 2 of those and you are covered for the next 6-12 months :huh:

 

Interesting - I thought 1TB was the biggest at the moment. My largest HDD is a 320GB external drive, while my laptop has a 100GB HDD. My new laptop about to arrive this week or the next will have a 500GB HDD.

Posted

Ok, so I only have a 250 GB and a 500 GB (I do not RAID!). But even when I've installed Fallout 3, Far Cry 2, Mass Effect, The Witcher and so on and so forth.. I still have like 450 GB free on the 500 and 240 GB on the 250! What do you use 3 TB of storage space for? What am I missing here?

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Posted
Also, why do hard disks always lie about their size? When I bought a 250GB HD, it actually was only 230. With a 500GB HD, it was 455. Now with this 1TB HD, it's 930 (so it says in the menu mentioned above).

 

They don't really lie. It stems from the difference in definitions of prefixes.

 

Standard definitions:

 

Kilo = 1,000

Mega = 1,000,000

Giga = 1,000,000,000

Tera = 1,000,000,000,000

 

Therefore, in standard terminology Terabyte is 1,000,000,000,000 bytes.

 

In computing terminology, however, each new prefix is defined by being a positive integer in 2^10n, so:

 

Kilobyte = 1,024 bytes

Megabyte = 1048576 bytes

Gigabyte = 1073741824 bytes

Terabyte = 1099511627776 bytes

 

(Note, this terminology has now been officially replaced to avoid confusion with lame names, such as Gigibyte...)

 

Hence, your HDD probably has 1,000,000,000,000 bytes, which is 1TB in standard terminology, but in the old, but still widely used computing terms, this only amounts to 909.4947017729282379150390625 computer Gigabytes (Gigibytes).

 

 

 

Yeah, manufacturers usually choose to measure memory not incorrectly, but so that the seems to be larger than it actually is by the way most operating systems measure it. But a friend of mine bought a 500gb drive this summer that was about 502gb, so not all manufacturers are running this mini-scam. I think it was a Seagate but Im not sure.

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Posted
Also, why do hard disks always lie about their size? When I bought a 250GB HD, it actually was only 230. With a 500GB HD, it was 455. Now with this 1TB HD, it's 930 (so it says in the menu mentioned above).

 

They don't really lie. It stems from the difference in definitions of prefixes.

 

Standard definitions:

 

Kilo = 1,000

Mega = 1,000,000

Giga = 1,000,000,000

Tera = 1,000,000,000,000

 

Therefore, in standard terminology Terabyte is 1,000,000,000,000 bytes.

 

In computing terminology, however, each new prefix is defined by being a positive integer in 2^10n, so:

 

Kilobyte = 1,024 bytes

Megabyte = 1048576 bytes

Gigabyte = 1073741824 bytes

Terabyte = 1099511627776 bytes

 

(Note, this terminology has now been officially replaced to avoid confusion with lame names, such as Gigibyte...)

 

Hence, your HDD probably has 1,000,000,000,000 bytes, which is 1TB in standard terminology, but in the old, but still widely used computing terms, this only amounts to 909.4947017729282379150390625 computer Gigabytes (Gigibytes).

 

 

 

Yeah, manufacturers usually choose to measure memory not incorrectly, but so that the seems to be larger than it actually is by the way most operating systems measure it. But a friend of mine bought a 500gb drive this summer that was about 502gb, so not all manufacturers are running this mini-scam. I think it was a Seagate but Im not sure.

 

Well, technically speaking the way manufacturers measure it is officially correct and the way the OS measures it is not. But yeah, it can be a bit deceptive.

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