Metrics
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I do not talk about switching from the empirial system to metrics from one day to another. But couldn't went the government or the legislative to the metrics system step by step? Regards Thomas Finally with Sonork id: 100.10453 Thömmi
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Because of heavy processing requirements, we are currently using some of your unused brain capacity for backup processing. Please ignore any hallucinations, voices or unusual dreams you may experience. Please avoid concentration-intensive tasks until further notice. Thank you.Sure, but it's so woven into the fabric of our society that it would take forever and 3 days to change everything over. Of course I'm exaggerating, and I know that a changeover is possible, but our gov't, and the whole nation for that matter, have no pressing to need switch to the metric system. Jon Sagara "... where the beer flows like wine, and the women instinctively flock like the salmon of Capistrano ..."
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I'd say for the USA it would need to be a 20 yr process, so it would need to pass through various different governments and administrations etc. I hope they are teaching metrics to kids in schools, so at least they have some understanding, and making a change will be easier. Learning the metric system takes a minor fraction of the time of using the imperial system. And the pay off for changing to metrics would be slow in coming. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
"real Americans don't criticize their leaders - because they don't want the terrorists to win." -- Quote from Chris Losinger a real American"
We (my schoolmates from the early years) learned to convert back and forth between all of the different units. In chemistry, we usually measured things in L/mL. In college, we learned in both metric and imperial, though metric was by far more popular among the professors. It's happening gradually, but it won't happen totally until the gubment gets behind it. Jon Sagara "... where the beer flows like wine, and the women instinctively flock like the salmon of Capistrano ..."
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Jon Sagara wrote: (Not to mention the fact that we would be admitting that we're wrong about something). That is probably the main reason why the USA hasn't changed. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
"real Americans don't criticize their leaders - because they don't want the terrorists to win." -- Quote from Chris Losinger a real American"
:laugh: Most likely. What a great country. :) Jon Sagara "... where the beer flows like wine, and the women instinctively flock like the salmon of Capistrano ..."
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I look at it this way, time is measured using 60 seconds per minute, 60 minutes per hour, 24 hours per day, 28, 29, 30 or 31 days per month and 12 months per year. It's not till the next levels (decades, centuries, milleniums) that metric applies. Since I'm an "all or nothing" kind of guy and time will never be metric, there is no point in changing to metric for anything else. ;P ;P ;P There is an old SNL sketch about the new "Metric Day"!!! Hilarious!! :laugh:
Mike Mullikin :beer:Our lager, Who art in barrels, Hallowed be thy drink, Thy will be drunk, (I will be drunk) At home as I am in the tavern, Give us this day our foamy head, And forgive us our spillages, As we forgive those who spill against us, And lead us not to incarceration, But deliver us from hangovers, For thine is beer, The bitter and the lager, Forever and ever, Barmen.:beer:
Hahaha. You stand corrected. This is a pet project of mine! Metric Time lives! Everything works great, except that a year is not the period of the Earth's rotation around the sun, which will become increasingly irrelevant as humanity moves away from Earth.
-Domenic Denicola- [CPUA 0x1337] MadHamster Creations "I was born human. But this was an accident of fate - a condition merely of time and place. I believe it's something we have the power to change..."
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We (my schoolmates from the early years) learned to convert back and forth between all of the different units. In chemistry, we usually measured things in L/mL. In college, we learned in both metric and imperial, though metric was by far more popular among the professors. It's happening gradually, but it won't happen totally until the gubment gets behind it. Jon Sagara "... where the beer flows like wine, and the women instinctively flock like the salmon of Capistrano ..."
Jon Sagara wrote: It's happening gradually, but it won't happen totally until the gubment gets behind it. We can blame a lot of things on "guberments". But generally guberments either do things to get votes for elections or because lobbies make it worthwhile for them. I don't think anyone will be elected for changing the USA to metrics, so it's going to have to happen as an economic reason, or becuse the makes of measurement equipment would benefit. It's nice to hear that children are learning to use it. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
"real Americans don't criticize their leaders - because they don't want the terrorists to win." -- Quote from Chris Losinger a real American"
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Jon Sagara wrote: It's happening gradually, but it won't happen totally until the gubment gets behind it. We can blame a lot of things on "guberments". But generally guberments either do things to get votes for elections or because lobbies make it worthwhile for them. I don't think anyone will be elected for changing the USA to metrics, so it's going to have to happen as an economic reason, or becuse the makes of measurement equipment would benefit. It's nice to hear that children are learning to use it. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
"real Americans don't criticize their leaders - because they don't want the terrorists to win." -- Quote from Chris Losinger a real American"
****Colin Davies wrote: so it's going to have to happen as an economic reason, or becuse the makes of measurement equipment would benefit. I agree with that. Jon Sagara "... where the beer flows like wine, and the women instinctively flock like the salmon of Capistrano ..."
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Just inspired by a current thread in the lounge: Why do some countries still use their feet to measure distances, even if the metric system has been introduced there for ages? Regards Thomas Finally with Sonork id: 100.10453 Thömmi
Disclaimer:
Because of heavy processing requirements, we are currently using some of your unused brain capacity for backup processing. Please ignore any hallucinations, voices or unusual dreams you may experience. Please avoid concentration-intensive tasks until further notice. Thank you.The metric system is obviously better for arithmetic, as we work in base 10 and thus performing calculations in metric is trivial. However, this is irrelevant if i'm "eyeing up" a measurement of some kind; in this situation, i'm making mental (or even physical) comparisons to other objects of known size, such as my fingers, hands, arms, pace, etc. This isn't to say i couldn't learn how many meters a pace is, or how many centemeters thick my finger is; but doing so would be no easier than learning any other arbitrary measurment system. Which is to say, it would be a very long, expensive, error-prone process. Now, this doesn't mean that it won't happen, but it is doubtful any nation-wide movement to implement such a system will ever take off; rather, it is most likely that such a transition, if it does occur, will occur slowly over time, as one system after another gradually converts. Remember, the metric system is nothing new; if it is to be adopted in a given situation, it will be because there is a pressing reason why it should be; obviously, that has not happened in many places yet. ...just my... (ok, what's $0.02 in metric...) ;) --------_**
And we die young. Faster we run.
**_
Alice in Chains, We Die Young
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Jon Sagara wrote: It's happening gradually, but it won't happen totally until the gubment gets behind it. We can blame a lot of things on "guberments". But generally guberments either do things to get votes for elections or because lobbies make it worthwhile for them. I don't think anyone will be elected for changing the USA to metrics, so it's going to have to happen as an economic reason, or becuse the makes of measurement equipment would benefit. It's nice to hear that children are learning to use it. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
"real Americans don't criticize their leaders - because they don't want the terrorists to win." -- Quote from Chris Losinger a real American"
****Colin Davies wrote: It's nice to hear that children are learning to use it. LOL, not really. The only formal education I got on metric was last year in 7th grade ;P
-Domenic Denicola- [CPUA 0x1337] MadHamster Creations "I was born human. But this was an accident of fate - a condition merely of time and place. I believe it's something we have the power to change..."
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The metric system is obviously better for arithmetic, as we work in base 10 and thus performing calculations in metric is trivial. However, this is irrelevant if i'm "eyeing up" a measurement of some kind; in this situation, i'm making mental (or even physical) comparisons to other objects of known size, such as my fingers, hands, arms, pace, etc. This isn't to say i couldn't learn how many meters a pace is, or how many centemeters thick my finger is; but doing so would be no easier than learning any other arbitrary measurment system. Which is to say, it would be a very long, expensive, error-prone process. Now, this doesn't mean that it won't happen, but it is doubtful any nation-wide movement to implement such a system will ever take off; rather, it is most likely that such a transition, if it does occur, will occur slowly over time, as one system after another gradually converts. Remember, the metric system is nothing new; if it is to be adopted in a given situation, it will be because there is a pressing reason why it should be; obviously, that has not happened in many places yet. ...just my... (ok, what's $0.02 in metric...) ;) --------_**
And we die young. Faster we run.
**_
Alice in Chains, We Die Young
I gotta agree with your post. NZ changed to metrics in 365 days, successfully. There have been a couple of surveys done of how countries changed and NZ ranked at the top. Part of the reason for this is NZ's relatively small size. The Carter Admin spent a lot of money recording how NZ had changed, wanting to implement similar methods for the USA. My 2 cents are that its going to take a lot longer for the USA to change, and the first changes should be teaching the basics of metrics in schools syllabii. I use both systems without any real problems, but doing physics and chem is so much easier in Metrics. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
"real Americans don't criticize their leaders - because they don't want the terrorists to win." -- Quote from Chris Losinger a real American"
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Hahaha. You stand corrected. This is a pet project of mine! Metric Time lives! Everything works great, except that a year is not the period of the Earth's rotation around the sun, which will become increasingly irrelevant as humanity moves away from Earth.
-Domenic Denicola- [CPUA 0x1337] MadHamster Creations "I was born human. But this was an accident of fate - a condition merely of time and place. I believe it's something we have the power to change..."
Domenic [CPUA 0x1337] wrote: Metric Time lives! Interesting project. :-) Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
"real Americans don't criticize their leaders - because they don't want the terrorists to win." -- Quote from Chris Losinger a real American"
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Thomas Freudenberg wrote: what are other bodily measurements Even though we are in R&R I don't wanna be explicitly vulgar and spell it out. But I'm sure you can guess. :-) Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
"real Americans don't criticize their leaders - because they don't want the terrorists to win." -- Quote from Chris Losinger a real American"
One of the reasons women are confused about conversions like this is because for generations we've been saying "inches" when we should have said "centimeters."
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I'd say for the USA it would need to be a 20 yr process, so it would need to pass through various different governments and administrations etc. I hope they are teaching metrics to kids in schools, so at least they have some understanding, and making a change will be easier. Learning the metric system takes a minor fraction of the time of using the imperial system. And the pay off for changing to metrics would be slow in coming. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
"real Americans don't criticize their leaders - because they don't want the terrorists to win." -- Quote from Chris Losinger a real American"
The metric system has been the legal "official" measurement system of the US since the Congress passed a law to that effect in the 1890's. We've had just a spot of trouble getting the herd to adopt it.
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Jon Sagara wrote: It's happening gradually, but it won't happen totally until the gubment gets behind it. We can blame a lot of things on "guberments". But generally guberments either do things to get votes for elections or because lobbies make it worthwhile for them. I don't think anyone will be elected for changing the USA to metrics, so it's going to have to happen as an economic reason, or becuse the makes of measurement equipment would benefit. It's nice to hear that children are learning to use it. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
"real Americans don't criticize their leaders - because they don't want the terrorists to win." -- Quote from Chris Losinger a real American"
In college, we used nothing else but the SI (metric) system, except for the Mechanical Engineers. They still want to play with lb-force, slugs, btus and the like.
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The metric system is obviously better for arithmetic, as we work in base 10 and thus performing calculations in metric is trivial. However, this is irrelevant if i'm "eyeing up" a measurement of some kind; in this situation, i'm making mental (or even physical) comparisons to other objects of known size, such as my fingers, hands, arms, pace, etc. This isn't to say i couldn't learn how many meters a pace is, or how many centemeters thick my finger is; but doing so would be no easier than learning any other arbitrary measurment system. Which is to say, it would be a very long, expensive, error-prone process. Now, this doesn't mean that it won't happen, but it is doubtful any nation-wide movement to implement such a system will ever take off; rather, it is most likely that such a transition, if it does occur, will occur slowly over time, as one system after another gradually converts. Remember, the metric system is nothing new; if it is to be adopted in a given situation, it will be because there is a pressing reason why it should be; obviously, that has not happened in many places yet. ...just my... (ok, what's $0.02 in metric...) ;) --------_**
And we die young. Faster we run.
**_
Alice in Chains, We Die Young
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In college, we used nothing else but the SI (metric) system, except for the Mechanical Engineers. They still want to play with lb-force, slugs, btus and the like.
Before switching to computer sciences, I learned Mechanical one. We used of course metric system, 'cause as french we didn't see the interest of imperial one. For US engineers, it's quiet different: all the mechanical data are based on these funny units, and standard elements, (like screws for example) are based also on it (for pitch or diameter). Because these dimensions are related to stress and strain, it seems easier to make calculation with imperial system to dimension a mechanical device which should use the US normalized parts. We're talking shit, 'cause life is a 'biz You know it is Everybody tryin' to get rich God damn! All I wanna do is live ! KoRn, Children of the Korn
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Because Americans (for example) are to stubborn to switch to the easier to use systems. Note: I am an American. -:suss:Matt Newman / Windows XP Activist:suss: -Sonork ID: 100.11179:BestSnowman
†****Matt Newman wrote: Americans (for example) are to stubborn Too stubborn and there is an awful lot of money that would have to be spent to upgrade everything to metric. All the road signs would need to switch (speed limit, distance to town/gas/rest area). Even the text on tires would have to change (instead of 35 psi it would be N/m2) all these changes cost money. Personally the only metric measurement I don't like is the kilometer, its just too short for me to visualize. It is about 0.1 mile for me to ride my bike to the corner and back; now if my calculations are correct it is about 0.161 km to the corner and back. It also makes estimating driving times difficult. Normal highway driving is 60 miles/hour = 1 mile/minute EASY to calculate, switch that to km and its about 96.7 km/hour rounded down because the state is always taking the safer figure and you get 95 km/hour = 1.58 km/minute a bit more difficult to calculate. Then you also have to change things you would never think of... Like recipies, milk containers, postal equations, programs which use feet/inches and pounds. The amount of stuff that needs to switch over is enormous and doing so is going to cost a lot of money. Money the government doesn't have and money which the government is going to have a hard time of getting (rightfully so). On top of that you need to get lawmakers with the balls to suggest doing it. I think it is safe to say the US will switch over to metric, but it is going to be at a very slow pace when the government can afford it. Frankly I don't know how the road system is going to get upgraded, there are so many projects in michigan alone that need to be completed before the taxpayers will even think about electing someone who is going to go for switching the signs. My $0.02 anyway, James Simplicity Rules!
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I'd say for the USA it would need to be a 20 yr process, so it would need to pass through various different governments and administrations etc. I hope they are teaching metrics to kids in schools, so at least they have some understanding, and making a change will be easier. Learning the metric system takes a minor fraction of the time of using the imperial system. And the pay off for changing to metrics would be slow in coming. Regardz Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
"real Americans don't criticize their leaders - because they don't want the terrorists to win." -- Quote from Chris Losinger a real American"
****Colin Davies wrote: I'd say for the USA it would need to be a 20 yr process, so it would need to pass through various different governments and administrations etc. I hope they are teaching metrics to kids in schools, so at least they have some understanding, and making a change will be easier. Learning the metric system takes a minor fraction of the time of using the imperial system. And the pay off for changing to metrics would be slow in coming. It certainly does take time - the UK nominally went metric in the 1970s, and only now are imperial units finally starting to disappear here - with a few notable exceptions: a pint of beer will probably be around for a long time. :D What is daft though is when traders are prosecuted for selling produce in imperial units at customer request. :mad: Andy Metcalfe - Sonardyne International Ltd
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Shog9 wrote: what's $0.02 in metric Approximatively 0,0227 € :-D We're talking shit, 'cause life is a 'biz You know it is Everybody tryin' to get rich God damn! All I wanna do is live ! KoRn, Children of the Korn
LOL Regards Thomas Finally with Sonork id: 100.10453 Thömmi
Disclaimer:
Because of heavy processing requirements, we are currently using some of your unused brain capacity for backup processing. Please ignore any hallucinations, voices or unusual dreams you may experience. Please avoid concentration-intensive tasks until further notice. Thank you. -
The metric system is obviously better for arithmetic, as we work in base 10 and thus performing calculations in metric is trivial. However, this is irrelevant if i'm "eyeing up" a measurement of some kind; in this situation, i'm making mental (or even physical) comparisons to other objects of known size, such as my fingers, hands, arms, pace, etc. This isn't to say i couldn't learn how many meters a pace is, or how many centemeters thick my finger is; but doing so would be no easier than learning any other arbitrary measurment system. Which is to say, it would be a very long, expensive, error-prone process. Now, this doesn't mean that it won't happen, but it is doubtful any nation-wide movement to implement such a system will ever take off; rather, it is most likely that such a transition, if it does occur, will occur slowly over time, as one system after another gradually converts. Remember, the metric system is nothing new; if it is to be adopted in a given situation, it will be because there is a pressing reason why it should be; obviously, that has not happened in many places yet. ...just my... (ok, what's $0.02 in metric...) ;) --------_**
And we die young. Faster we run.
**_
Alice in Chains, We Die Young
Shog9 wrote: Now, this doesn't mean that it won't happen, but it is doubtful any nation-wide movement to implement such a system will ever take off; rather, it is most likely that such a transition, if it does occur, will occur slowly over time, as one system after another gradually converts. I have grown up with the metric system, therefore I have no problem with it. But if all my environment, such as my parents, friends, TV, etc, would have used the empirial system, I would either. Regards Thomas Finally with Sonork id: 100.10453 Thömmi
Disclaimer:
Because of heavy processing requirements, we are currently using some of your unused brain capacity for backup processing. Please ignore any hallucinations, voices or unusual dreams you may experience. Please avoid concentration-intensive tasks until further notice. Thank you. -
One of the reasons women are confused about conversions like this is because for generations we've been saying "inches" when we should have said "centimeters."
Good point ;-) But do not tell the women :~ Regards Thomas Finally with Sonork id: 100.10453 Thömmi
Disclaimer:
Because of heavy processing requirements, we are currently using some of your unused brain capacity for backup processing. Please ignore any hallucinations, voices or unusual dreams you may experience. Please avoid concentration-intensive tasks until further notice. Thank you.