a lifetime metric user am I. m versus M is news to me.
1, 4 - in context, it's almost never an issue (and where it might be, it's disambiguated). like, distance is going to be kilometers, weight is sure to be kilograms, etcetera. less common stuff like kilowatts is never just k.
3 - here I kind of agree: the base unit of weight oughtta have been something more intuitive, maybe like a few hundred grams (a cup or something). still, the kilo is plenty human-scale. grams are, in the mind, mili-kilograms and that's kinda weird.
5,6 - are? who uses ares? in my mind the hectare might as well be a basic unit, in which case yeah, it should have been called a field or something. in my country the de facto basic unit is the half-a-hectare (cinco mil metros cuadrados) of agricultural land, cause rural land can't be sold in smaller chunks than that (supposedly)
7 - possibly because the gram itself was defined as a millionth of a ton? i'm ever surprised that metric tons and freedom tons are almost the same.
tbh hectares are weird but that's somewhat because area is weird.
if i were to make up a new decimal system I'd take the cup(300 grams or so), the meter (maybe call it a step), the beat (however long a metronome beat is in 'happy birthday to you', probably about 1/100th of a minute. I always have trouble counting seconds mentally, they're a bit too long, but who doesn't know happy birthday to you), and whatever anyone else wants for amperes, kelvins and candelas because who cares about those. oh, and fuck moles, 1e24 or whatever. but, honestly, i have the feeling any old quantity would be about as useful once people get used to thinking in whatever order of magnitude is closest to their everyday experience.
that being said, i quite like inches. i learned about them as a child, of course, but stuck them into "bah, freedom unit number 21934761234 alongside the stone and the football field" but once i got into sewing (yeah, bought me a sewing machine, fun stuff! i can make pillows now) i got to liking them. it's a lot more pleasant to think about human-scale measurements in inches tbh. 56 centimeters are too many centimeters and might as well think 22 anyway. that being said, 16ths of an inch is just madness: what's wrong with 22.351 inches ?
sasasha wrote: ↑Mon Dec 04, 2023 2:08 pm
Code: Select all
°G °C
1 2.7315
2 5.463
3 8.1945
4 10.926
5 13.6575
6 16.389
7 19.1205
8 21.852 Room temperature
9 24.5839 Warm day
10 27.315 Brits complain
11 30.0465 Hot summer
12 32.778
13 35.5095 Normal body temp in this range
(13.5 36.87525) Normal body temp
14 38.241 Fever
15 40.9725
16 43.704
17 46.4355
18 49.176
19 51.8985
20 54.63
21 57.3615 Minimum hot hold
22 60.093
23 62.8245 New name of coffee chain
24 65.556
25 68.2875
26 71.019
27 73.7505 Cook food above this temp
28 76.482
29 79.2135
30 81.945
31 84.6765
32 87.408
33 90.1395
34 92.871
35 95.6025
36 98.334
(36.61 100.000215 Water boils at sea level)
37 101.0655
38 103.797
39 106.5285
40 109.26
…
50 136.575
60 163.89
70 191.205
80 218.52
(451°F is like 85°G or summit, so tell Ray Bradbury)
90 245.839
100 273.15
honestly I... kind of fucking love it ? even degrees celsius feel like too big numbers for everyday use for me. like what's the difference between being 10 and 11 degrees outside? degrees G, however, feel inch-sized.