Google has Googaplexes but not Gigabytes - Good Enough software?

 

Google has its large numbers such as googaplex:

"Googleplex" is a portmanteau of Google and complex (meaning a complex of buildings) and a reference to googolplex, the name given to the large number 10(10100)

There are further such curt identifiers for big, big numbers:

A googol seconds is about a sexvigintillion (1081) times the estimated age of the universe. A googol angstroms is approximately 100 trevigintillion light-years. It takes approximately 317 novemvigintillion years to count to a googol one integer at a time.

Unfortunately, at least part of the Google enterprise is still getting to grips with rather smaller numbers, such as the Gigabyte:

Since when has a gigabyte just 1000 megabytes?

Perhaps this is some kind of IT equivalent of a move toward the metric system? Yet it looks more like a bug.

In software there are always trade-offs, the most obvious being Quality vs Productivity, and this seems such an example... 

OR is this a case of "good enough" software, where the quality is reasonably acceptable considering the business value of investing further in the tool...

Good Enough software:

consumers will use products that are good enough for their requirements, despite the availability of more advanced technology


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