How do you feel about converting to the Metric system?

Yeah, but admit it … if you were world empress then everybody else would be obliged to be using spans, hands and ells too.

No, they could use whatever the hell they wanted. I like diversity. I’d outlaw usury though, among quite a few other things. Not diversity.

Can’t people use whatever they want now? They just can’t dictate other people accept them, though. Same as always.

It’s not like uniform standards are a modern thing. They’ve been around as long as more than 10 people lived in the same place.

The difference now is technology allows us to travel/communicate fast enough that it matters which standards are used in a Japanese Empire and which used in a Roman Empire. There was no meaningful ‘diversity’ in standards until people could meaningfully travel and conduct business across long distances and it turned out the different civilizations that cropped up here and there came up with their own (uniform within the civilization but also unique to it) sets of standards.

Rather than having the matter dictated to them, most people have throughout recorded history preferred the ability to do business with a minimum of conversions.

The previous thread proved that standardized weights and measures are only possible through the metric system. So that’s a big plus.

OK, my meat market sells prime steaks for $2 per pound, and I advertise that prominently. Except that the pound I use is 25 grams. You don’t want to stop me from using my own pound, do you?

I dunno, how heavy are those grams?

I’m pretty sure Chronos’ grams are a unit of time

Most people aren’t climate scientists and most scientists aren’t climate scientists. Personally, I have no issue with people using what’s the most useful for them. Astrophysicists might work in Kelvin and AU, jewelers use carats and troy ounces, and so on. You’re going to learn what’s useful for your profession and interests and it’s better to use the system that’s most useful for the purpose. If astrophysicists had to use meters, that would get unwieldy.

Centigrade units are too large by double for a useful thermostat and 0, 25, 75, and 100 are far more eloquent for understanding comfort levels than -18, -4, 24, and 38. You can fudge that a bit to say that it snows at 0 in Celsius…except that it usually doesn’t. But, that’s the only way to get a number out of it that seems like it was put on a scale intended for humans to talk about the weather today.

Fahrenheit was developed for “average people to discuss ‘How’s the weather today?’” As such, it’s the best system for it.

Rubbish.
The Master Speaks on the collaboration of Fahrenheit and Romer

And on this side of the puddle, we have no difficulty discussing ‘How’s the weather today?’” in Celsius. Not even a remarkable skill.

I have mentioned this before, but a friend of mine who was spending a year in Oslo went to a lumber yard and asked the clerk at the front for a 5 x 10 cm post. The clerk picked up a phone asked for a 2 x 4.

Plywood is still sold in Canada in 4’ x 8’ sheets. And I’m not sure about ordinary lumber. But aside from a few anomalies like that, metric has taken over completely. One other thing. People still give their height in ft/in and weight in lbs. That might stay for a long time. The metric system offers no advantages for that.

In Europe, in my experience the word pound (livre, Pfund,…) is used to mean 500g. I noticed fruit in a market priced in pounds. Here prices of meat, etc., are sometimes given as $10 a kilo or $4.52 a pound. I suspect that will disappear as people my age do.

I mean some people here are in the “How can the Chinese even communicate with each other in that gibberish?” world now.

Disagree. Fahrenheit degrees are too small by about a factor of two. Nobody can actually tell the difference between 72F and 73F. A Celsius degree is about the smallest difference humans can actually detect.

When I was in school (in the US), we were taught both systems. I don’t find either, or conversion especially hard.

But most people boil water and freeze ice for their drinks…

Funny, my AC seems to work just fine in single °C increments.

Yeah, that’s already been debunked.

Once again - what’s so special about a 0-100 scale specifically for discussing the weather? Like decimal fractions, are negative numbers beyond American understanding? I doubt that.

And I am glad I don’t live in a part of the world where I ever have to talk about -18 °C weather :slight_smile:

And here, a pint is 500ml.

I’m all for it. it’s much easier to deal with even in daily life. In fact, I believe a bungle between imperial and metric cost $125M with a NASA space project (sorry I can’t recall, it wasn’t Hubble but another astronomy project). Should’ve happened a long time ago— thanks Reagan.

Here’s an excuse to post one of the more iconic pieces of Slug Signorino artwork.

0 is cold, 25 is pleasant, 75 you’re dead, 100 you’re deader… so not very eloquent at all.

It’s ounces that really piss me off. Volume or weight? Give me liters or grams. That being said, why do they say “A thousand kilometers”? Why not “A megameter”?

Curiously, at least here in Denmark, prices used to be given pr. metric pound (500g) but has for some years now been pr. 1/2 kg. Exactly the same, of course, but I’ve never found out why they changed the notation.