Robert Harvey has taken me to a train of thoughts which simply says:
- A: and B: are useful, because you can use those stations to access diskettes and floppies.
A: and B: are useful, because you can use those stations to access diskettes and floppies.
- The difference between a kibibyte, a kilobit, and a kilobyte is useful for interpreting sizes.
The difference between a kibibyte, a kilobit, and a kilobyte is useful for interpreting sizes.
- The bit count of a byte is not useful because it doesn't have practical use for Super Users.
The bit count of a byte is not useful because it doesn't have practical use for Super Users.
Thanks to others like Linker3000 and Wil for pointing me that way, I learned to interpret that rule better...
So, this is where the following rule kicks in to close the question:
You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face.
And the practical word is key here, as the actual word need you to interpret whether it's practical.
And if it were practical, it would still be closed for being too simple as the top 3 Google results answer it...