• alvvayson@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    A megagram is 1000 kg, by definition. It’s symbol is Mg.

    In metric countries, we just use the word “ton” as shorthand/slang for it, since it is an easier term and was well known.

    The only reason the US calls it a metric ton, is because they have archaic units (long and short tons).

    Metric countries don’t call it a metric ton.

    • Dharma Curious@startrek.website
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      1 year ago

      No one in the US knows WTF a long and short ton are. A ton is 2k lbs. And most Americans probably don’t even know the exact weight of a ton outside of “a shit load.”

      For the most part, we generally only use pounds, feet, miles. Everything else is a mystery. Even ounces, cups and gallons are some fucking magical mystery. Just follow the recipe.

      I switched everything to metric years ago, and have never been happier. It made a huge difference in most of the things I do, having a system that makes internal sense. The only thing I still routinely use standard for is sewing, because it’s damn near impossible to find any patterns or things like cutting mats in metric in the right sizes for quilting.

      • yA3xAKQMbq@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        There recently was a discussion on lemmy where several US citizens (one of them allegedly an engineer…) tried to explain to me that metric might be „more precise“ (? 😂) but the imperial system more practical, because „everybody knows what a foot is“. When I asked them to add feet to miles I got shouted at (in CAPS) that noone (ever) does that. 🤷‍♀️

        • CIA_chatbot@lemmy.world
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          Lol, that sounds very much “as a black man”

          I’ll tell you, most of us in the states would love a total switch to metric. We use it where is matters most, but we also have an aging population raised on lead has fumes that think anything they don’t know is “communism” or “wholeness” or whatever else the propaganda right spews. Those are the assholes that pretty much stop progress on anything.

          I’m big into 3D printing, actually got into the same argument with another 3D printing guy…. And I’m like, literally EVERYTHING we do is in metric. The whole damn hobby is metric.

          I hate humanity

          • yA3xAKQMbq@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            Lol, that sounds very much “as a black man”

            You mean the „engineer“? Well, what can I say, he was insisting his professor at uni taught him „a true engineer can work with every system“.

            I mean yes, but the difference is one engineer is just happily pushing around decimals, the other one goes pale when you ask what 1/5th of a gallon in cubic inches is…

            • CIA_chatbot@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Hehe, yea, I was poking fun at the “engineer”. There was a congressman a while ago that got caught posting right wing stuff on twitter from an alt account “as a black man” (dude was white of course”

          • Rusticus@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            You do realize that the US tried to switch to metric for 6 months in the 70s and it was a giant failure so we switched back, yes? Do you think 2023 America is smarter than 1970s America lol?

            Edit: not sure why downvotes. I am in favor of switching US to metric. But historically it didn’t work.

            • CIA_chatbot@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              You do realize asshole Republicans reverted before it could be more than implemented on a couple of highways

              “Metric supporters argued the road signs were a crucial step in helping Americans get over any psychological blocks to switching measurement systems. But Republican Charles Grassley, then a congressman and now a senator from Iowa, killed proposed federal regulations that would have forced states to put up signs in kilometers.”

              They literally locked putting up signs in both metric an Imperial

              Also… remember my comment about old fucks raised on gas lead fumes…. Yea, the 70s……

              • DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Given that the 70’s was 50 years ago, most people don’t know the details of what happened. Other than a metric conversion was attempted.

                It’s both surprising and not that it was killed by republicans. And given the current nationalist furor in the party, it doesn’t have a snow ball’s chance in hell of happening in the next decade. If it was proposed, again.

            • Astrealix@lemmy.world
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              I mean, I’d be very worried if 2023 wasn’t smarter than 1970 no matter the location. Between the lead poisoning and the advancements in knowledge and education methods…

            • tunetardis@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              it was a giant failure

              Well not entirely. 2L coke bottles emerged around that time and they’re still around!

          • DKP@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Sometimes I like to think about the logistical challenges with a switch to metric. The one that always gives me pause is highway signs. Thinking about the monumental task of replacing every speed sign, distance sign, and mile marker across the country in any timely period makes my head hurt.

            It could certainly be done, and is probably easier than I think with all the state DoTs working independently on it especially over time. We have a lot of road with a lot of signs.

            • JungleJim@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              That’s a good point, but we don’t have to even fully replace them. I admit I don’t know the name of the technology but I see many street signs or construction signs that have basically a printed metal sticker slapped over the old information.

            • Dharma Curious@startrek.website
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              I honestly hate that argument. “it would cost so much to change all those signs” is just negative talk for “it would employee a shit ton of people, create a lot of jobs, and be a major infrastructure project that could help our economy.”. Honestly, the economic benefit of major infrastructure works is rarely talked about as much as it should be. Mainly, I think, because the people it benefits are the ones actually doing the work. And that’s scary to a certain segment of society that would like very much that not to be the case.

              • DKP@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                I don’t think it’s a valid argument against metric, just a thought experiment to consider about the time needed to implement. Converting would be a slow process, but I agree it could be an economic boost as swapping things is a largely a manual process

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                  Meant to mention in my first comment, I haven’t met many other people who like to randomly imagine the ways major structural changes would take place. Lol.

                  I like to pick a huge project. Like, say, single payer healthcare, or the nationalization of an industry, and then imagine the individual steps that would need to be taken to get there. Doesn’t necessarily have to be a project I’d support, I just have fun imagining the ways it would need to happen.

            • TheIllustrativeMan@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              I think the bigger one is the construction industry.

              2"x4" studs. 4’x8’ plywood. 16" O.C.

              Changing to 44x95, 1219x2438, 406 O.C doesn’t make a whole lot of sense. We could switch over to the metric equivalents (like 1250x1250 or 600 O.C.), but that would mean switching out machinery and would break a lot of standards.

        • BarqsHasBite@lemmy.caOP
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          1 year ago

          I say that Metric is like color vision. You can see things in whole new and easier ways. People in USC can’t understand what others see and insist things are just fine the way they are. Thus the “no one ever does that”, “why would you need to know that”, “who cares”, etc.

          • sanpedropeddler@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            It is true that no one ever does that though. That doesn’t mean its not a problem, but I’ve never seen anyone do it. If you need to do something like that and you have a brain, you use metric. Just because its flawed doesn’t mean imperial should be completely abolished though. What needs to stop is people thinking imperial is better than metric somehow. Aside from that, its just a weird flawed measurement system.

            • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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              1 year ago

              We don’t use imperial in the US, we use US customary. Some units have different sizes in imperial. For example, a US pint is 16oz and an imperial pint is 20oz.

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            I’ll tell you something I do as a woodworker a lot that metric isn’t great for: divide by powers of two, three or four. I’ve got some boards milled up 3/4" thick. I’m going to join them with a bridle joint, that means cutting the middle third out of one and the outer two thirds from the other. So each of the remaining “tongues” are each 1/4" thick. 3/4" is approximately 20mm. That’s a nice metric number, a multiple of 10. Let’s cut that same bridle joint in 20mm stock. What’s a third of 20mm? Can you come point to 6.6666mm on my metric tape measure here?

            Don’t pretend base ten doesn’t do stupid things too.

            • barsoap@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              Can you come point to 6.6666mm on my metric tape measure here?

              Yes: For woodworkers, it’s identical to 6.5mm, accurately eyeballed at between 6 and 5mm. Don’t pretend you’re a machinist. Does your tape measure even have a vernier scale. Does it make satisfying clicks when measuring. If you have a slip instead of interference fit just dump one piece in water for a second it’ll be fine.

              • angrystego@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                To be more precise, it should be rounded as 6.7 cm, accurately eyeballed at between 6.6 cm and 6.7 cm.

        • sanpedropeddler@sh.itjust.works
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          They are right, no one ever does that. Their reasoning for the imperial system being practical is stupid though. The reason it can be practical is that its useful to have a unit the size of a foot sometimes. Metric is better in general, but there are aspects of the imperial system I would miss if I switched entirely. I just use imperial in casual conversation and metric for anything important.

          edit: To be clear I’m not saying conversion from feet to miles isn’t a problem because no one does that, its the opposite. No one does it because its a problem.

            • Dharma Curious@startrek.website
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              That’s the great thing about being a metric user in the US. It’s not the common system here, and the only people who really use it consistently are those who do so for work, and those who just enjoy it the same way one might enjoy learning a new language. It’s sort of a grassroots thing here. And because it’s not the standard system, there’s no one here telling us what measures are socially acceptable to use and which aren’t. Use the decimeter. Hell, if you like it, use it in Europe, you might get a weird look, but it won’t be like asking for the distance to the deli in leagues. They’ll still understand. In the US, use the decimeter if you want. I’ve used the metric system exclusively for so long, started as a sort of personal test, that I tend to think in metric now. I look at something and think “30cm” more than I think “a foot,” occasionally I’ll think “bout a 1/3 of a meter.”

              Have fun with it. Also, hot tip. If you ever struggle with temps, it’s percentage of boiling. 0% of boiling is frozen. 100% of boiling is boiling. 20% of boiling is nice.

          • yA3xAKQMbq@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            Sigh, here we go again…

            Yes YOU don’t do that. Because you can’t.

            Everybody in Europe can and does so. There’s nothing arcane or mysterious about the metric system. I have no issues telling you how many litres of water go into a 50 x 50 x 200 cm aquarium, or a pool with a 3.5 m diameter and 80 cm height. Good luck doing that with your inches and feet and quarts and gallons.

            There’s nothing „more useful“ about either a foot or a meter. Either you know how much it is or you don’t. Everybody knows what a meter is. For me it’s a large step. My arm from elbow to fingertips is 50 cm. Or 1/2 m… A sheet of paper is 30 cm (actually it’s 297 mm, but that’s another story), and so are rulers. Which, btw, is very close to a „foot“.

            Your foot btw most likely is not as long as a „foot“, and a small woman’s size is easily 20% off. And no, that’s not „in the ballpark“.

            • sanpedropeddler@sh.itjust.works
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              Yes YOU don’t do that. Because you can’t.

              I won’t argue that, its a flawed measurement system. My goal isn’t to show you why imperial is so much better than metric, because its obviously not. That doesn’t mean imperial is never useful though.

              There’s nothing „more useful“ about either a foot or a meter.

              They can both do the same job, but its more convenient to have smaller units depending on what you’re measuring. I find the size of a foot to be convenient for measuring things in casual situations where accuracy and precision aren’t priorities.

              Your foot btw most likely is not as long as a „foot“, and a small woman’s size is easily 20% off. And no, that’s not „in the ballpark“.

              We don’t literally measure it with our feet, that’s just what its called.

              • yA3xAKQMbq@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                but its more convenient to have smaller units depending on what you’re measuring.

                See, that’s what apparently many people don’t understand: with metric you don’t have „larger or smaller units“. You have one unit and you scale it to your needs. It’s not like we have „the meter“ and „the centimeter“ and have no clue what’s in between. There’s absolutely nothing more convenient about having multiple units for the same physical property.

                I find the size of a foot to be convenient for measuring things in casual situations where accuracy and precision aren’t priorities.

                Again: There’s nothing more or less precise about metric or imperial. You have a mental image of a „foot“ the same way I have a mental image of a ruler or a sheet of paper, i.e. 30 cm.

                I don’t really know what a litre is. I know what a beer bottle looks like, or a milk carton, the same way you know what a quart of milk looks like. Pour a quart on the floor and ask someone how much that is, they probably don’t know.

                We don’t literally measure it with our feet, that’s just what its called.

                Oh, I definitely had other people tell me imperial is „more human“ because a foot is the size of your foot and an inch is the size of the tip of your thumb.

                • sanpedropeddler@sh.itjust.works
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                  with metric you don’t have „larger or smaller units“. You have one unit and you scale it to your needs.

                  That’s the same thing, the units are just proportional.

                  It’s not like we have „the meter“ and „the centimeter“ and have no clue what’s in between.

                  I know, its just easier to say a foot than 30 centimeters. That’s why I use it in casual conversation, and not in anything important.

                  There’s absolutely nothing more convenient about having multiple units for the same physical property.

                  That’s not the part I’m saying is convenient.

                  Again: There’s nothing more or less precise about metric or imperial.

                  They can both be used to measure things precisely, but metric is more convenient in those situations usually. If I need to accurately measure something, I would use metric because the advantages of imperial are probably not applicable. If I’m just estimating and it doesn’t matter much, I’ll probably use imperial because I won’t have to do any conversions with that number, or anything else imperial struggles with.

                  Oh, I definitely had other people tell me imperial is „more human“ because a foot is the size of your foot and an inch is the size of the tip of your thumb.

                  Those people are wrong.

                  • yA3xAKQMbq@lemm.ee
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                    1 year ago

                    That’s the same thing, the units are just proportional

                    Sure, if you put it like that. But I do have the feeling many US people treat imperial units like completely different things and have absolutely no mental concept of a relation between them, especially between length and volume.

                    I know, its just easier to say a foot than 30 centimeters.

                    That’s just a completely arbitrary thing. It’s easier to answer „how tall are you“ with „one eighty“ instead of „five foot eleven“ 🤷‍♀️

                    It doesn’t seem to be an issue for „metric people“ at all, nobody is missing the foot in Europe.

                    Because if it were convenient we would have that, the same way we have a ton, or a pound (500 g), which are in common use. You have the decimeter (10 cm), but nobody uses it. There used to be a unit called „Elle“, which is 50 cm, and it’s just the name for the stick, nobody says „give me 3 Ellen of canvas“.

                    I would use metric because the advantages of imperial are probably not applicable.

                    I still fail to see those advantages.

                    If I’m just estimating and it doesn’t matter much, I’ll probably use imperial

                    Yes, because you’re used doing so, not because it’s more practical or convenient. Metric people do estimate things as well.

          • tunetardis@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Sometimes I think there was a missed opportunity in defining an easy conversion between inches and cm. It is 2.54 cm to 1". Why couldn’t it simply be 2.5? Then a 2x4 from the building supplier could simply be renamed a 5x10. 5.8x11.6 doesn’t quite roll off the tongue as well.

            My understanding is that the metre was inspired by nautical measures? So the distance from pole to equator along sea level is supposedly 10000 km. But that’s pretty approximate, and there is a more rigorous definition that involves the wavelength of a certain type of radiation. But that number is quite arbitrary-sounding. Couldn’t they have chosen it to line up with the imperial system at some level to aid migration? Anyway, that train has left the station and I’ll stop ranting now…

            • xigoi@lemmy.sdf.org
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              At the time when the metric system was created, imperial units weren’t standardized at all, so if centimeters lined up with one definition of inch, they wouldn’t line up with the many other definitions anyway.

              • tunetardis@lemmy.ca
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                Point taken. Reading up on it on wikipedia, I love the the legal definition from 1814, wherein one inch = “three grains of sound ripe barley being taken out the middle of the ear, well dried, and laid end to end in a row”.

        • Dandroid@dandroid.app
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          As an American, I understand that metric is better for a lot of things. It also would cost a metric fuck ton (ha!) of money to switch over, and it just really isn’t a priority when things work just fine for us here. It’s not like we are constantly running into problems that would be easier to solve by using metric, and the people in the few professions that do run into those problems frequently just use metric.

          The original idea behind imperial units is actually quite nice. They used 12 inches in a foot because you could divide it in so many ways without using decimals. You can take 1/2 of it, 1/3, 1/4, and 1/6 without ever needing decimals. It’s great for mental math with small numbers. That obviously is no longer the most important thing anymore, as we all have calculators with us at all times, and we deal with much bigger numbers on average than they used 200 years ago.

          We all still use 360° in a circle for this exact reason. It can be divided up in 22 different ways (excluding 1 and 360 as factors).

          • yA3xAKQMbq@lemm.ee
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            The original idea behind imperial units is actually quite nice. They used 12 inches in a foot because you could divide it in so many ways without using decimals. You can take 1/2 of it, 1/3, 1/4, and 1/6 without ever needing decimals.

            You can measure 1/2, 1/3, or 1/4 of a meter, why wouldn’t you? Also, seriously, those common fractions aren’t that hard in decimal. Everybody knows that 125 g is 1/8 kg.

            That’s not the issue. The issue is that it’s not consistent between imperial units, you have a zoo of different subdivisions between units. You have 12 inches in a foot, three foot in a yard etc pp.

            The issue is it gets really unwieldy in multiplication, 1 cubic ft is how many cubic inches… 1728, how convenient.

            Tell me how much is 1/6 cubic ft in inches? How many cups are that? There goes your mental math.

            (It is also a common misconception that imperial is „duodecimal“. It’s not. It’s counting to 12 in decimal. If you had a proper duodecimal system, „12“ * „12“ would make 100 not 144.)

            We all still use 360° in a circle

            And you also say 180°, 45°, 720°. Not 1/2, 1/8, 2.

          • tunetardis@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Ok, I have heard this argument before.

            If you go down this rabbit hole, you will eventually realize that it is our base 10 number system that is weak in terms of divisibility. If we counted in base 12, the metric system would follow suit and you’d have your convenient fractions.

            In my “perfect world” musings, however, I jump back and forth between base 12 and some power of 2 base. The latter would not be very naturally divisible but would make basic arithmetic much easier. There is a reason computers prefer binary.

            The other point I’d like to raise is that even in the imperial system, you are not spared having to deal with awkward fractions, as you will realize when you walk into a hardware store looking for that 5/64" screw. Apparently, fractions are not a deal breaker in this case, so perhaps we should refer to a third of a metre as simply that: 1/3m?

        • sfgifz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          I saw that too, and many of them claimed they learn both Metric and Imperial British systems and convert between them all the time. So this stood out now:

          For the most part, we generally only use pounds, feet, miles. Everything else is a mystery. Even ounces, cups and gallons are some fucking magical mystery. Just follow the recipe.

          • Dharma Curious@startrek.website
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            I mean, it’s true. Ask an American to visualize an ounce of anything other than drugs, and they probably won’t be able to. Ask how many ounces in a gallon, and they’ll Google it. Even cups aren’t well understood. We can eyeball a mile on the interstate, or tell you how tall someone is, or lift a box and guess it’s weight to within 5 pounds. But honestly, that’s about it. We just aren’t really taught to visualize our weights and measures, it’s why newscasters keep saying shit like “8 Olympic swimming pools!” Or “the size of three football fields” because we just don’t have a coherent system ingrained in us. That’s also, I think, why we’re so against metrification. Because weights and measures feel hard, because we’re basically only semi-literate in our own mother tongue, so a “foreign language” feels like it’d be this huge undertaking.

            • sfgifz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              We just aren’t really taught to visualize our weights and measures, it’s why newscasters keep saying shit like “8 Olympic swimming pools!” Or “the size of three football fields”

              This really isn’t an American thing - it’s just human, we can’t really visualize dimensions accurately unless we have a good reference. Some may measure the Olympic swimming pool in feet others in meters, but the effect is the same.

              • Dharma Curious@startrek.website
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                Really? … Am I super weird then? Because I can visualize volume and distance really well. I just assumed that was being, like, literate in both systems of measure.

                • sfgifz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  Everyone can visualize volume and distance really well in their own head. Doesn’t mean they’re right. Try it for yourself, maybe you’re gifted?

            • Throwaway@lemm.ee
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              Why on Earth would I ever do that?

              1. If I was a rail engineer, I would have a chart (or a calculator if its past the year 1980)

              2. Can you divide 1000 by 39 quickly and easily?

              • yA3xAKQMbq@lemm.ee
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                It’s called an example. Want another one? How many laps do you need to run on a 400 m track to run a 10k? How many people can you serve with your 2.5 kg steak if everybody needs to get a 250 g steak? Need more?

                • Throwaway@lemm.ee
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                  Heres the thing, your examples suck because there are no good examples. Almost no one needs to make conversions in their daily lives and those that do have charts and calculators.

                  Life is not a math problem.

        • Dharma Curious@startrek.website
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          Yes. Jesus, why can’t Europeans educate themselves on real measurements! We measure in feet and bald eagles for distance. We measure in shotgun shells, elbows and pounds for weight. We measure in ATNT for temperature. That’s Ambient Truck Nut Temperature, which is the temperature of a pair of truck nuts after driving for 80 bald eagles at 40 bald eagles per Active Shooter Warning, at sea level on a Wednesday. It’s not complicated.

        • grozzle@lemmy.world
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          it’s from the Latin “libra”, for balance, like a set of scales. the £ symbol for pounds as in money is a stylised L for the same reason!

          etymology lesson over, imperial/customary gtfo resumes. metric ftw.

    • ArbiterXero@lemmy.world
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      Canada does, because we’re mostly metric but still do enough business with the US that we’re sorta half and half

    • BarqsHasBite@lemmy.caOP
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      We call it a metric tonne in Canada.

      There’s also short ton and long ton which have to be differentiated, but no one ever knows which one they are using.

    • johsny@lemmy.world
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      I only use that term when I call a lot of items “a metric fuckton of stuff”