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To Keep Track of World's Data, You'll Need More Than a Yottabyte
mardi 12 mars 2019, 01:20 , par Slashdot
An anonymous reader shares a report: In 10 or 15 years, Dr. Brown, who is head of metrology at the National Physical Laboratory in the U.K., anticipates the amount of computerized data worldwide will exceed 1 yottabyte in size, and without expanding the list of prefixes, there will be no way to talk about the next great chunk of numbers. Even worse, dilettantes could fill the void by popularizing glib prefixes such as bronto or hella -- terms that have already won fans. Without professional intervention, Dr. Brown fears, the next numerical prefix could become the Boaty McBoatface of weights and measures.
For the record, there is an argument to be made for adopting a prefix like bronto: giga and tera are based on the Greek words for 'giant' and 'monstrous.' Why not make bronto, named for the brontosaurus, official, perhaps along with tyranno, stego, colosso or even yeti? Dr. Brown is sympathetic to the argument but unconvinced. Instead, he proposes four prefixes that adhere to recent naming conventions [Editor's note: the link may be paywalled; an alternative source was not available.]: ronna and quecca for octillion (27 zeros) and nonillion (30 zeros), along with ronto and quecto for their fractional counterparts, octillionth and nonillionth. Like the latest sanctioned prefixes, Dr. Brown's proposals are loosely related to Latin and Greek words for numbers (in this case, nine and 10). And like most of the prefixes, his suggestions end in 'a' or 'o.' But the process of expanding, or even amending, the official measurements is lengthy. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/uVUnYxFrV1k/to-keep-track-of-worlds-data-youll-need-more-th...
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