Comment by da_chicken

15 days ago

Confusing baud and bit rates is consistent with actually being there, though.

As someone that started with 300/300 and went via 1200/75 to 9600 etc - I don't believe conflating signalling changes with bps is an indication of physical or temporal proximity.

  • I think it was a joke implying you'd be old enough to forget because of age, which in my case is definitely true...

    • Oh, I got the implication, but I think it was such a common mistake back then, that I don't think it's age-related now - it's a bit of a trope, to assume baud and bps mean the same thing, and people tend to prefer to use a more technical term even when it's not fully understood. Hence we are where we are with terms like decimate, myriad, nubile, detox etc, forcefully redefined by common (mis)usage. I need a cup of tea, clearly.

      Anyway, I didn't think my throw-away comment would engender such a large response. I guess we're not the only olds around here!

    • No, just that confusing the two was ubiquitous at the time 14.4k, 28k, and 56k modems were the standard.

      Like it was more common than confusing Kbps and KBps.

      I mean, the 3.5" floppy disk could store 1.44 MB... and by that people meant the capacity was 1,474,560 bytes = 1.44 * 1024 * 1000. Accuracy and consistency in terminology has never been particularly important to marketing and advertising, except marketing and advertising is exactly where most laypersons first learn technical terms.

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