Whoosh, I think. Antipodes are points that are 180 degrees apart. There are no such thing as podes, but a person with a satirical nature would think that if there were it would be the opposite of antipodes, and therefore 360 degrees apart, or at the same point.
This is a bit of a fact I’ve learned recently and a bit of a “holy crap I’m a moron” moment. Last night I was watching a movie called Sun Dogs when Chips Ahoy! cookies were mentioned, and I noticed that it was a pun on the phrase “Ships Ahoy!”. Those things have been around for all of my life. I used to see them advertised on TV. I still see them in stores. I’ve eaten them before. But as far as I can recall, I never noticed the pun before.
If you use google maps to find the Great Pyramid of Giza and place the cursor directly at the top, the Latitude matches the speed of light out to the seventh digit.
I know this was explained in posts 157 and 158, but it reminds me of another “fun fact to know and tell”*.
At 40 F and 15 PSIG, you can put more molecules of CO2 in a tank if is filled with water than one that was completely empty (perfect vacuum).
When my brother and I were kids, we found a book entitled Fun Facts to Know and Tell filled with tidbits such as found in this thread. I don’t remember the fun facts, but we made plenty of fun at the dorkiness of the title.
That reminds me - recently I bought some 3M sticky tread stuff that you put on stairs, similar to this:
The product is 6 inches by 24 inches. My son pointed out that the one I bought says:
12 FT[sup]2[/sup] (1.1 m[sup]2[/sup])
6 IN x 24 IN
That one in the Amazon link has a changed label but it’s still glaringly wrong. Someone must have pointed out to them that it was wrong and they had the same incompetent person change it.
My son’s theory, which I think is likely, is that someone multiplied 6 inches by 24 inches and got 144 square inches, which they then stupidly converted to 12 square feet. Then somehow (probably a converter utility) converted that figure to 1.1 square meters. I’m not above making stupid mistakes like that occasionally, but I’d think that I would do a common sense check at the end, and I would sure catch it before it got printed on the official label.
A few years ago my gf asked me how many square feet our LR, BRs, DR, and hall encompassed. I took a tape measure and calculated, giving her a number.
A bit later she told me I had fucked up. So, I found the blueprints of the house and took the numbers from there, arriving at an answer that was very close to my first calculation. No, she said that was impossible.
Turned out she was shopping for carpeting, which is sold by the square yard, but she had asked me for square feet. She was calculating cost based on my reply and it seemed way too expensive.
I’m sure it is now but back in the day that was the only way to mass copy original construction documents of scale. When I was right out of high school I worked for architect who made his own blueprints. He rolled his original drawing with the print paper and put them in a tube. He then set this tube vertically over a small container of ammonia. I miss the smell of blueprints.
(Apologies if I’ve already said this on here, but it does seem apropos. )
For a very long time I thought how odd it seemed that “heroine”, a word meaninng female hero, and “heroin” the most feared and reviled bête noir of all narcotics, were pronounced the same.
Then I learned that the inventors of heroin thought it would be “heroically” effective in treating pain and that was how they came up with the name. Well, it is that, I suppose, but it’s a lot of other things too, unfortunately.