• Geodad@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    I prefer metric for anything I do, despite living in the US.

    My coffee recipe is in mL. I use g and mL while cooking.

    Metric is the superior system.

  • Zerush@lemmy.ml
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    18 days ago

    Imperial system not even make difference between weight and mass, it is the most outdated system worldwide and the cause of a lot of desastres with even victims, because due to calculation errors, inherent in this system.

    • F_State@midwest.social
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      16 days ago

      For day to day life, weight and mass might as well be the same. I love science and astronomy but I’m not buying a pound of lunch meat at the deli counter to take into space.

      • Zerush@lemmy.ml
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        16 days ago

        Well, when I buy a pound of lunch meat in the EU, they give me 500 g of lunch meat, because this is what for us is a pound. The SI system are round clear and related numbers which make it easy to calculate, the Imperial system isn’t, nothing to do with going in space or building a quantum computer, but simply calculating the amount of plants with a distance of 2 inches in a garden with 20 feets.

  • Global_Liberty@lemmy.ml
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    18 days ago

    I grew up with metric and moved to an imperial country as an adult. I now have a different view of the systems and honestly prefer imperial. Hear me out.

    Imperial organically evolved over centuries to better match the lived human experience. The major units used now are more useful to the average person. The fact they are not base 10 is due to the fact that the main uses for each aren’t related in that way.

    For temperature, 1 degree Fahrenheit is the minimum I can feel. 50 F is a middle temperature outdoors for many temperate climates: 0 F is very cold and 100 F is very hot. The temperature at which water boils or freezes at sea level is not as useful to my daily experience and the difference in a degree Celsius is too large.

    I like inches, yards, and miles. I prefer ounces and pounds. Pints, quarts, and gallons now make more sense to me. I am not a scientist or engineer (who absolitely should use metric), but a guy trying to deal with weather, get places, and buy things to eat/drink.

    Of course, if I learned an aircraft type was designed in imperial only, I wouldn’t get on it. Metric has its purpose. It’s just not as good for daily life.

    • F_State@midwest.social
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      16 days ago

      To me, kilometers and miles are in a similar class; I don’t have a reason to prefer one over the other. Same with kilos/pounds. Even though a kilo is more than double a pound, it’s used to measure the same kinds of things. As with Centimeters/inches, quarts/liters, yards/meters.

      Metric seems to do better at measuring very small things, or very precise things, but lacks middle measures that help with day to day life like Ounces and Feet. If there was a metric foot, like a quarter or third of a meter, it would be more useful. Same if there was a metric ounce, lets say 25 grams (an actual ounce is slightly over 28 grams).

  • Jentu@lemmy.ml
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    19 days ago

    Brits need to stop implementing inferior (though accessible) standards, then after abandoning them when realizing their mistake, make fun of others using the previous standard. Don’t let anyone find out you used to call association football “soccer” to be distinct from rugby football or still measure some things in imperial stones.

    Non-brits, this isn’t directed at you lol. I know imperial measurements suck