The USA is very prone to "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" in these things.![]()
Frustration is a subjective thing that can't be measured. What measurable disadvantage lies in the Imperial system? How much money does America's construction industry lose every year building a skyscraper whose height and structural components are measured in feet? How much does the Imperial system cost the food processing industry when food is packaged by the pound? Does your car have lower gas mileage when it's built using Imperial measurements instead of metric?Because when try to calculate how much long something is in metres and in kilometres, you only need to move the decimal place. It saves the person a lot less frustration in calculation.
A proton is 1-15 yards across. There. Just did it in Imperial measurements. "Millimeter" doesn't mean anything by itself; it's simply a fraction of a meter, and is useless unless you have a meter around for reference. The only reason the Imperial system doesn't have "milli-inches" is because nobody bothered to coin the term. I could simply create the word "femtoyard", and there we have it: the proton is 1 femtoyard across.Furthermore, the smallest unit for the Imperial system is inch, (because nobody uses thou, which is smaller than a millimetre) That means inches are your smallest unit. Meanwhile, metric systems have lengths that go down to the size of quarks in atoms, all based on unit values of 10s. Scientist are unable to use the Imperial system for any work and research. And also because it's so darn clunky.
One mole of iron weighs two ounces. One mole of lead? Seven ounces. Next up: cure for the common cold---errr, never mind. Cured that last week.I'll like to see you try work out molar quantities in Imperial for chemistry.
Frustration is a subjective thing that can't be measured. What measurable disadvantage lies in the Imperial system? How much money does America's construction industry lose every year building a skyscraper whose height and structural components are measured in feet? How much does the Imperial system cost the food processing industry when food is packaged by the pound? Does your car have lower gas mileage when it's built using Imperial measurements instead of metric?
What is the actual benefit of the metric system? There isn't one.
I, on the other hand, just thought up one definite benefit of keeping the Imperial system: when a U.S. military plane crashes somewhere outside the U.S., it's much more difficult to reverse-engineer if nobody else on the planet has tools that will fit......
One mole of iron weighs two ounces. One mole of lead? Seven ounces.
What is the actual benefit of the metric system? There isn't one.
Frustration is a subjective thing that can't be measured. What measurable disadvantage lies in the Imperial system?
There are two solutions to that problem--and one of them is to simply do everything with Imperial measurements. The problems inherent in using two systems does not address the question of which one we should be using.You talk like everything in the U.S. is actually measured in Customary. It's not. Probably close to a quarter of it is done in metric, then converted as needed. It's unnecessary, and inefficient.
Same mistake here, Tru. That example with the crashed satellite only illustrates the problem of working with two systems--your example doesn't answer the question of which system is better. Will a satellite work better if it's built/programmed entirely in Imperial, or entirely in metric?
As a former programmer, I can testify personally: such conversions are not a problem, and the Imperial system really doesn't produce greater risk of error. When converting from one unit of (por ejemplo) length to another, you need to multiply or divide by a specific value--and that factor still has to be exactly right. It's just as easy to drop a zero, type in "METERS = MILLIMETERS / 100", and end up with a program that screws up all the distance measurements. In fact, dropping a zero is a much easier programming error to make, because a string of zeroes is harder to read--whereas the error in "FEET = INCHES / 13" is a lot easier to spot.Umm... for one, unit conversion is way easier. Moving from cm to m to km is extremely simple, moving from inches to feet to yards to miles is not. The simplicity saves time, and reduces the possibility of error.
Maybe it will help if you project. Lets try thatWhat will always boggle my mind, and I probably point this out every time this topic has a thread, is why all you non-Americans even care one way or the other?
Does Greece still have the monarchy in any way legally? If not, then they are not princes and kings, they're just average joes pretending to be something they are not.
In your reply to glassfan here, why did you conveniently ignore The Falklands, which he mentioned right alongside Gibralter, where an aircraft carrier would most assuredly come in handy. Just as having carriers in the fleet came in quite handy in the 80s when their citizens were attacked and sovereign territory invaded thousands of miles away from the British Isles?
As a former programmer, I can testify personally: such conversions are not a problem, and the Imperial system really doesn't produce greater risk of error. When converting from one unit of (por ejemplo) length to another, you need to multiply or divide by a specific value--and that factor still has to be exactly right. It's just as easy to drop a zero, type in "METERS = MILLIMETERS / 100", and end up with a program that screws up all the distance measurements. In fact, dropping a zero is a much easier programming error to make, because a string of zeroes is harder to read--whereas the error in "FEET = INCHES / 13" is a lot easier to spot.
The real, actual benefit from the scenario you describe is miniscule, and the fact that American industries have not already converted wholesale to metric is testimony to this. If Imperial was costly, greedy corporations wouldn't use it.
If you have decimal movement, you should eat more fibres.Why would we take crap off of Europeans about decimal movement when you can't even count to a billion correctly? :angry:
There are two solutions to that problem--and one of them is to simply do everything with Imperial measurements. The problems inherent in using two systems does not address the question of which one we should be using.
Same mistake here, Tru. That example with the crashed satellite only illustrates the problem of working with two systems--your example doesn't answer the question of which system is better.
Will a satellite work better if it's built/programmed entirely in Imperial, or entirely in metric?
VRWC's most kick ass post this decade.
Originally Posted by VRWCAgent
Hey have you all seen Maru's latest box adventures??
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PTwb2LG-2dU
There are two solutions to that problem--and one of them is to simply do everything with Imperial measurements. The problems inherent in using two systems does not address the question of which one we should be using.
That's actually a good, and maybe a more important point that what it first appears to be. (At least to me it did). I even think you might have hit on the very reason why people will defend the imperial system so vigorously.I will say one thing, it's much nicer to say something is "two miles away" than having to say "it's three kilometers away". Extra syllables and all that.
I will say one thing, it's much nicer to say something is "two miles away" than having to say "it's three kilometers away". Extra syllables and all that.