if you see an American (me) whining about it being -8 degrees just know that -8C is warm in comparison

  • the rizzler
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    4 days ago

    fahrenheit is the one unit i will never give up. fuck celsius and whoever said it was “more logical” to compress the majority of the weather into the same 30-degree span. i will go to my deathbed weighing 35 kilograms at a body temperature of 95 degrees.

    • volcel_olive_oil [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      4 days ago

      Celsius is more useful

      reason: it’s the unit people use

      sidenote: a small, disadvantaged 3-4% minority never learned it, because of failures in their education system

    • aebletrae [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      4 days ago

      Typical supremacist indoctrination, treating integers as if they’re the only real numbers, and decimal places as if they aren’t significant at all.

      • the rizzler
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        3 days ago

        to paraphrase several europ*ans i’ve heard, fahrenheit for daily use, rankine for science.

      • BodyBySisyphus [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        4 days ago

        Yeah but that’s not how the number monkeys running human heuristics work. 70 degrees F = warm, I can wear a T-shirt and shorts; 60 degrees F = a little bit cooler, I would wear pants and long sleeves. 21.111 degrees C vs 15.556 degrees C = monke-beepboop

        • volcel_olive_oil [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          4 days ago

          I don’t know why people insist on bringing up decimals at all for Celsius; nobody uses them. never even think about temperatures other than in 5C increments

          it’s

          30C - too hot

          25C - perfect

          20C - oh that’s nice

          15C - I’m wearing a thin jacket

          10C - I’m wearing a jacket

          5C - I’m wearing a hat and a scarf

          0C - winter has arrived

          -5C and below - damn it’s kinda cold

          • BodyBySisyphus [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            3 days ago

            That’s fair, but Fahrenheit is basically the same thing but for 10s and fits comfortably between 0 and 100:
            100 - I ain’t movin’
            90 - too hot
            80 - hot
            70 - perfect
            60 - cool
            50 - chilly
            40 - brisk
            30 - brr
            20 - heavy coat
            10 - heavy coat + thermals
            0 - I ain’t movin’

          • the rizzler
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            3 days ago

            negative celsius is the most important part of why i dislike it. in the fahrenheit you have “below freezing”, which isn’t really all that cold, and you have “below zero”, which is fucking freezing. you could say “below negative seventeen point seven eight” i guess

            • Soot [any]@hexbear.net
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              2 days ago

              This reasoning is bizarre to me. Is it 0 or less? Then it will fundamentally change the weather - it’ll be frosty, watch out for ice or snow. I’m not sure why you’d “most importantly” prefer negative meaning that yeah it’s like… colder.

              • the rizzler
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                2 days ago

                because it’s convenient to be able to express the difference between just below freezing and abnormally cold. it’s the difference between wearing a sweater and a long sleeve shirt and wearing a jacket and scarf. or just not going outside.

        • booty [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          4 days ago

          20 celsius is 68 fahrenheit, 21 celsius is not quite 70 fahrenheit. you don’t need the granularity of fahrenheit, you cannot feel the difference between 68 and 69 fahrenheit. any belief you have that there is a benefit to fahrenheit is an illusion brought about from your immersion in it

        • Soot [any]@hexbear.net
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          4 days ago

          Because that level of precision is… entirely unnecessary anyway. Say 21C vs 15C and everybody understands the same thing.

        • Euergetes [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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          4 days ago

          70 degree F - 60 degree F comparison is just 20 and 15 C for the purposes of dressing you don’t really need to use the fractions lol. you do need to abandon the notion that every perceptually significant difference is 10 degrees up or down.

          ironic i was replying to someone suggesting F gives users more granularity but how you use it you’re only paying attention to the deci-degrees

          • the rizzler
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            3 days ago

            it’s not just the granularity. in the modern day weather systems convert from celsius anyway, so you will never see a temperature of 69 (unfortunately). it’s about how many numbers relating to humanity happen to fit in between 0 and 100°. if i were designing a system of measurement from scratch i would set whatever baseline body temperature is at 100. call it the “go nude in the shade” temperature. the temperature at which the average person is at complete equilibrium with the room. for zero it would have to be something really cold so that “below zero” actually means something. the actual number is debatable but it definitely isn’t the point at which water freezes. fahrenheit isn’t perfect but it almost matches those those constraints and so, while certain climates might regularly fall outside the 0-99° range, i think most people in the world would agree that their definition of “temperate” falls in there, and outside that range is uncomfortable. also as a bonus the difference between freezing and boiling is 180°F, which is half 360°, which is a nice number.

            • Euergetes [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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              3 days ago

              below freezing is not subjective and tells you concrete things about the environment. i don’t see the advantage in having “temperate” on a 30 vs 20 degree scale, 1 degree C and 1 degree F are both imperceptible

              • the rizzler
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                3 days ago

                it’s an advantage of having “below zero” actually tell you something, and to tell you something different from “below freezing”. it’s useful shorthand for “it’s fucking freezing out”

      • the rizzler
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        3 days ago

        you can, or you can make things simple and use the human scale of measurement

      • Xavienth
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        4 days ago

        “Stupidly unrelateable” lol. lmao

        Americans stop universalizing your experience challenge (impossible)

        • microfiche [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          4 days ago

          ITT:

          The exact same shit you’re hollering about but from the other side. It’s almost like it’s all pretty fucking lame and you should just log off.

          Celsius is more useful

          reason: it’s the unit people use

          sidenote: a small, disadvantaged 3-4% minority never learned it, because of failures in their education system

          • Euergetes [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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            4 days ago

            SI is not “relatable” it is based on universally observable constants. no one has to ask another country “hey what’s a kilogram” or “how long is a meter” you just do some math

            • the rizzler
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              3 days ago

              to be fairrrrrrrrrrr, us units are all defined through metric units. so same

            • microfiche [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              4 days ago

              Justifying why it’s not reallllly the same kinda bellyaching.

              This web forum is a good source of consistency and intelligence at all times.

          • Xavienth
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            4 days ago

            I never said anything about Celsius being better. I was pointing out that “Fahrenheit is more human” - a take I see all the time from Americans - only seems to hold water if you are familiar with Fahrenheit. But then it just reduces to Fahrenheit is good because it’s familiar. Which… yeah lol.

            Celsius isn’t better for regular people with the sole exception of telling you what kind of precipitation is falling based on the minus sign. But it’s not worse either