• LibsEatPoop [any]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    Honestly? I’ve only lived in countries with Celsius and Celsius is how I feel. I know exactly how hot or cold a day is gonna be if I look up the temperature. Thats how I know what clothes to wear!!! But Fahrenheit confuses the shit out of me. Every time I visit the US, I always convert the temp back to Celsius when someone tells me the temp.

    I know Fahrenheit has more degrees and that can give you more datapoints. But cmon. The temp only goes up to, like, 50 C anyways lol. How many degrees do you need 🤣. Can you really differentiate between 61 and 62 F? Now, 60 to 65 F might be believable, but that’s like 15 to 18 C so, that much difference is shown even in Celsius.

    I’m not saying Celsius is better, or that Americans should convert to it. Actually, if I was God-Emperor, I’d force us all to use Kelvin, given it begins with Absolute Zero and I’m a sucker for shit like that.

    But variety is the spice of life. For Americans, Fahrenheit is how they feel. For most of the rest of us, it’s Celsius.

    • 𝚝𝚛𝚔@aussie.zone
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      4 months ago

      I know Fahrenheit has more degrees and that can give you more datapoints.

      How do decimal places work?

    • Fuck spez@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      I’m not saying Celsius is better, or that Americans should convert to it.

      I am. But first, metric mass, volume, and distance.

      Signed,
      An American (who doesn’t like fractions)

    • sorghum@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      This came up a week ago. I made a chart:

      Temps easily relatable conditions
      <0 throw boiling water up in the air to make it snow
      0-10 dangerous freezing cold
      10-20 bitter freezing cold
      20-30 freezing cold
      30-40 coat cold
      50-60 jacket cool
      60-70 cool
      70-80 pleasant
      80-90 warm
      90-100 hot
      100-110 too damn hot for my fat ass/fry an egg outside

      One of the conclusions on why I like Fahrenheit over Celsius for weather is it’s ironically the most base 10 like for a non-SI scale. A phrase like “it’s going to be in the 70s today” has so much information in it. Usually with no weather changes like a front coming in, you’ll know that during the day it’ll be pleasant. At night the temperature range will drop by around 10 degrees and you’ll know you’ll likely need a light jacket or at least long sleeves to stay comfortable.

      If metric wanted to adopt a scale with more graduations that could be easily grouped to 10s, that’d be great. I don’t know why 0-100 was arbitrarily chosen to be the scale for water instead of 0-1000.

      For temp measurements outside of weather I really do prefer Celsius though.

      • Salamander@mander.xyzM
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        4 months ago

        As someone who grew up in the tropics and now lives somewhere colder, I went through the first three table entries thinking that this was Celsius and felt understood.

      • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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        4 months ago

        but like we do the exact same thing with celsius, if you say "it’s gonna be about 15°C today then i know what to wear.

        people don’t stand there doing maths to figure out what to wear, they intuitively learn what clothes go with what number.

      • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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        4 months ago

        you know how cold ice is, right? and you know how hot boiling water is.

        Just interpolate between them. For some extra assistence, you get burns when in extended contact with something at 40°C, 20°C is a cool summer day, and the standard oven temperature is 200°C.