Gibibyte


The gibibyte is a multiple of the unit byte for digital information. The binary prefix gibi means 230, therefore one gibibyte is equal to = 1024 mebibytes. The unit symbol for the gibibyte is GiB.
It is one of the units with binary prefixes defined by the International Electrotechnical Commission in 1998.
The gibibyte is closely related to the gigabyte, which is defined by the IEC as 109 bytes =, ≈. 1024 gibibytes are equal to one tebibyte. In the context of computer memory, gigabyte and GB are customarily used to mean 10243 bytes, although not in the context of data transmission and not necessarily for hard drive size.
Hard drive and SSD manufacturers use the gigabyte to mean bytes. Therefore, the capacity of a 128 GB SSD is bytes. Expressed in gibibytes this is about 119.2 GiB. Some operating systems, including Microsoft Windows, display such a drive capacity as 119 GB, using the SI prefix G with the binary meaning. No space is missing: the size is simply being expressed in a different unit, even though the same prefix is used in both cases.
The use of gigabyte to refer to bytes in some contexts and to bytes in others, sometimes in reference to the same device, has led to claims of confusion, controversies, and lawsuits. The IEC created the binary prefixes in an attempt to reduce such confusion. They are increasingly used in technical literature and open-source software, and are a component of the International System of Quantities.