• az09mugen a day ago

    Another fun fact dating from French revolution is the 10 hour-day, each hour had 100 minutes and each minutes 100 seconds : https://historyfacts.com/world-history/fact/france-had-a-cal...

    • paulorlando a day ago

      Fun fact... or not so fun?

      For 12 years of the revolutionary era, France did use decimal time. And the calendar and clocks were organized around a 10 day week and a 10 hour day. But those changes, coupled with the loss of Sunday worship, had other effects on the population.

      Here’s an assessment of what was really meant and then lost by the elimination of Sunday:

      “‘The elderly ladies took advantage of the long journey (to church) to exchange old stories with other old gossips … they met friends and relatives on the way, or when they reached the county town, whom they enjoyed seeing … there then followed a meal or perhaps a reciprocal invitation, which led to one relative or another….’ But if that was the way it was for the old ladies, what did Sunday mean to ‘young girls, whose blood throbbed with the sweetest desire of nature!’ We can well understand their impatience, ‘they waited for each other at the start of the road they shared,’ they danced.

      “Now, however, when the Tenth Day came around, ‘the men were left to the devices they always had:’ the old men went to the tavern, and they bargained. The young men drank and, deprived of their ‘lovely village girls’, they quarrelled. As for the women, they had nothing left to do in village. The mothers were miserable in their little hamlets, the daughters too, and out of this came their need to gather together in crowds. If the need for recreation is necessary because of moral forces… there is absolutely no doubt that village girls find it very hard to bear privations which are likely to prolong their unmarried state: ‘in all regions the pleasure of love is the greatest pleasure.'”

      – from The Revolution Against the Church, From Reason to the Supreme Being, by Michel Vovelle, pp 158-159.

      • thrance 20 hours ago

        I know the real goal of the republican calendar was to undermine the Church's power by making it so Sundays would fall at random days of the week, and also screw over the workers by leaving them with a worse weekend-to-week ratio.

        However, all I ever read about this part of the revolution seems to indicate that people just didn't comply and went to church anyway on Sundays, and also didn't work that day. On that account, I feel likr your quote is kind of partisan. People wouldn't have been left lost and aimlessly drinking on their tenth day because of a lack of God, because they never quit going to church!

        • paulorlando 19 hours ago

          Not sure I understand what you mean. At least, I thought that (most? all?) the churches were closed for the worst part of the French Revolution aftermath.

          For example, the new state transformed Notre Dame and other Catholic churches into Temples of Reason, from which the new state religion, the Cult of Reason, would be celebrated. It didn't last long. Hard to create a new religion quickly. Maybe some echoes of recent history there.

          • thrance 19 hours ago

            It was much more nuanced than that, and the vast majority of the French people stayed Christian during the period. Also, keep in mind the revolution was mostly a Paris thing, the rest of the country was left relatively unaffected at first.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dechristianization_of_France_d...

            • paulorlando 17 hours ago

              Is the difference "stayed Catholic" vs the churches had to close?

              • pessimizer 16 hours ago

                Pretty sure it mattered when and where you were. Armies and militias were sent to put down defiant regions who had set up their own armies and militias in order to keep the Revolution out.

              • mousethatroared 11 hours ago

                Ya, Vendee really protests too much

            • ashoeafoot 15 hours ago

              https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sowjetischer_Revolutionskale... did the divide and conquer of people better by asigning them non overlapping weekends by colour

          • kitten_mittens_ 21 hours ago

            If you’re interested in a what an analog clock in decimal time might look like: https://decimal-time.netlify.app/

            • timewizard 11 hours ago

              The USPS uses decimal time for it's time keeping system. It serves almost no functional advantage.

              http://www.nalc3825.com/ETC_clockring_entries.pdf

              • userbinator 6 hours ago

                Decimal minutes instead of seconds, to be precise.

                • saalweachter 3 hours ago

                  The way it should be.

                  So imagine we get to Mars, establish a colony.

                  Mars has a day which is 24h 36m.

                  We could have all of our Martian colonists adhere to an Earth day of 24 hours, with sunrise and sunset drifting around the clock, or we could have them observe an extra 25th hour of the day that lasts 36 minutes.

                  Or, we could define the Martian day as 24 Martian hours of 60 Martian minutes of 61.5 seconds, with seconds the invariant interchange time between planets.

                  In turn, seconds stop being a unit of human timekeeping, and everyone just uses decimal minutes as the final subdivision.

                  • datavirtue an hour ago

                    Oh sweet summer child...we humans are tethered to Gaia.

                    • philwelch 22 minutes ago

                      Speak for yourself

              • az09mugen 20 hours ago

                Ahah nice one, thanks for sharing !

                • thrance 20 hours ago

                  Slightly unnerving seeing seconds pass by 15.74% faster.

                  • pavlov 19 hours ago

                    Feels like living in the future. Progress marches on faster than ever.

                    Honestly a brilliant marketing move by the French revolutionaries, just a few hundred years too early.

                    • HideousKojima 18 hours ago

                      If they were truly revolutionary they would have gone for base 12 or 60 instead of 10

                    • HPsquared 20 hours ago

                      Uncanny valley. Never seen a clock do it before.

                      • wyett 20 hours ago

                        My thoughts too.

                  • linguistbreaker 21 hours ago

                    I hadn't heard of this and it's fun to think about.

                    It's 100,000 s/day as opposed to our current 86,400 s/day which is not far off.

                    Hours, however, were twice as long.

                    They had time pieces that displayed both together.

                    • Swenrekcah 21 hours ago

                      Their seconds must have been about 864ms though, otherwise they day is more than 3 hours too long which would be very annoying for any kind of scheduling I’d imagine.

                      • bonzini 17 hours ago

                        It also messes up the original proposal for defining the meter, which predated the revolution and was "the length of a pendulum with a period of 2 seconds" (i.e. the pendulum would be at its lowest point once per second). Which is ironic considering that the meter was also adopted during the revolution, though with a definition not based on the length of a pendulum).

                        • raattgift 4 hours ago

                          Latitude, mass concentrations, and climate also messed with the half-period/metre ("seconds pendulum") definition; with increasing frequency precision, one would need an almanac, an accelerometer, and probably other tools. Additionally, stabilizing the length of the pendulum under environmental conditions was already known to be tricky, with materials science unable to produce reasonably low thermal-expansion rods prior to the 20th century.

                          Consequently, the seconds-pendulum/metre relationship gets in the way as one might want to go to sub-millimetre length precision for parts made in different locations or at different times of the day or year. Precision copies of a prototype was more reliable in practice.

                          (In practice we mostly still generate precise and accurate physical artifacts and make copies from those, it's just that there one can in principle generate such an artifact just about anywhere and anywhen, calibrating with (for example) interferometry <https://iopscience.iop.org/book/edit/978-0-7503-1578-4/chapt...>)

                          Finally, the Trinity Clock <https://clock.trin.cam.ac.uk/main.php?menu_option=theory> is a neat examination of a well known pendulum clock that's surprisingly accurate (if not really precise; it's been reliably accurate to within two seconds over the course of a month for a very long time, but it's not going to give you a 10MHz sine-wave, and it's not a good for disciplining an oscillator which does so). Do check out the various plots.

                          • bonzini 3 hours ago

                            > Latitude, mass concentrations, and climate also messed with the half-period/metre ("seconds pendulum") definition

                            Probably not by 15% which was the difference between the traditional second and the decimal second.

                            • raattgift 2 hours ago

                              Sure but using a physical pendulum as a frequency standard is unreliable; an unreliable frequency standard is a bad basis for any sort of time-of-travel definition of length.

                              Many difficulties of using pendulum clocks (and in transporting any sort of chronometer) in real circumstances were also known before the revolution, with French clockmakers competing for the prize money in Britain's Longitude Act 1714 (13 Ann. c. 14) and the ancien regime's various prize offers in the 1740-1770s.

                              Prior to Harrison's marine chronometers, minimum longitude errors introduced in multi-degree changes of latitudes were indeed on the order of 10% across an oceanic part of a great circle or other more favourable route under cloudy conditions, and sufficient that in the early 18th century it was common for ships to navigate by dead reckoning along a single line of latitude -- a boon to pirates and other enemies, and also often adding many days to the travel time, in an effort to avoid the common problem (eg. HMS Centurion, 1741) of not knowing whether one was west or east of a landmark at a known latitude.

                              Prominent pre-revolutionary figures also disliked the idea of relying on chronometry for position/length/angle measurements generally -- most notably the excellent geometer and astronomer Pierre Bouguer (after whom the relevant <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bouguer_anomaly> is named) -- so it's not as if messing up a seconds-pendulum-based definition of a metre (and its consequences for the neat pole-to-equator 1/4 great circle length or mass of a cm^3 of water at STP, both of which now are just approximately round numbers) would have been universally outrageous.

                              And anyway surely one could consider a solution in which the half-period of the metre pendulum might not be exactly one decimal second. After all, at the time in practice one had to measure across many swings to obtain the effective length with reasonable precision. And Earth's rotation was known to be unstable (Richer, Newton, Maupertuis).

                        • IAmBroom 20 hours ago

                          Yes. Obviously.

                          Or more to the point: since they had no use for milliseconds at that time, their milliseconds would have been 86.4% of standard milliseconds.

                        • hilbert42 21 hours ago

                          What about 90° per right angle and not 100°?

                          It made sense to keep some things like angle measurement and time as disruption was too great for very little practical benefit.

                          • IAmBroom 20 hours ago

                            It's called a "gradian", and it's 1% of a right angle.

                            It's still used in some industries, where convenient.

                            • hilbert42 16 hours ago

                              Yeah, sure. The last person I heard discuss it was my highschool math teacher and he did so only in passing—and that was quite some decades ago.

                              Anyway, my non-metric preference is the radian unless I'm doing something manual like woodworking.

                            • az09mugen 21 hours ago

                              Still France and French revolution context : https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gradian

                          • GuB-42 16 hours ago

                            Another "fun fact" somewhat more relevant to the article is the gradient (aka. grad, or gon), it is a unit of angle equal to 1/400 of a turn, slightly smaller than a degree.

                            It goes well with the metre because 1 km is 1/100 grad of latitude on earth. It mirrors the nautical mile in that 1 nautical mile is 1/60 degree (1 arcminute) of latitude on earth.

                            The grad is almost never used on a day to day basis, even in France. It is still used in specialized fields, like surveying.

                            • vidarh 5 hours ago

                              In some languages, e.g. Norwegian, grad means degree.

                            • cafard 18 hours ago

                              As I habitually mention when the revolutionary calendar comes up, emacs calendar mode will give you the date with p-f. For what it's worth, today is Quartidi 4 Prairial an 233 de la Révolution, jour de l'Angélique. (Prairial I had heard of, jour de l'Angélique is news to me.)

                              [edit: corrected spelling of Quartidi]

                              • nancyminusone a day ago

                                Sadly, the 100 day year never worked quite right.

                                • thrance 20 hours ago

                                  No but they had a clean year of 12 months, 30 days each (3 ten-day weeks) plus 5/6 holiday days at the end of the calendar (around the September equinox).

                                  Also, the months were given names by a Poet, and the days had minerals, vertues or plants instead of Saints. The calendar itself was pretty cool.

                                  Honestly, if they had 5 weeks of 6 days each instead of the 3 weeks of 10 days, I'd even call it the perfect calendar.

                                  • tempestn 16 hours ago

                                    Better would be an even more fundamental change: instead of trying to standardize everything on base 10, recognize that base 8 or 16 is much more convenient in both computing and everyday life, and standardize around that.

                                    • dragontamer 12 hours ago

                                      Historically, the most convenient are numbers with large numbers of factors.

                                      60 can be split into 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20, 30 evenly for example

                                      The other number that accomplishes this is 12: 2, 3, 4, 6 are all factors.

                                      That's why 12 and 60 are so common for real life systems.

                                    • Snow_Falls 20 hours ago

                                      Might I introduce you to visions of what could have been: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calendar_reform

                                  • mjevans 8 hours ago

                                    Given the difference of ( 10 00 00 ) / 86400 ; they made their second ~1.1574 times faster? ( 125 : 108 , or 5 * 5 * 5 : 2 2 3 3 3 )

                                    • ucarion 20 hours ago

                                      And every other month was named after a coup d'etat!

                                      • jacquesclouseau a day ago

                                        inb4 we still have the 8 hour workday

                                      • skrebbel a day ago

                                        > (It was later found the astronomers were a bit off in their calculations, and the metre as we know it is 0.2 millimetres shorter than it should've been.)

                                        That's actually impressively good accuracy for the time! Hats off to the astronomers.

                                        • hilbert42 21 hours ago

                                          I was just about to post same quote but you beat me to it.

                                          I'd go further, I think their work was a remarkable feat for the late 1790s. That they achieved that accuracy given the primitive equipment of the day says much for their abilities and understanding.

                                          Also at the time France was in turmoil, numbers of its scientists were victims of the French Revolution—Antoine Lavoisier, probably the greatest chemist of his time—was beheaded by guillotine in 1794, so the political environment was anything but stable.

                                          Look back 225+ years ago: there was no electricity, no material science to speak of to make precision instrumentation—journal bearings on lathes, etc. couldn't be made with the accuracy of today, backlash would have been a constant worry. All instrumentation would have been crafted by hand.

                                          And the old French pre-metric system of units was an imperial system similar to the British (France even had an inch that was similar in length to British Imperial unit). All instrumentation up to that point would have relied on the less precise standards of that old system.

                                          Traveling was by horse and sailing ship, and so on. Surveying would have been difficult. There wasn't even the electric telegraph, only the crude optical Chappe telegraph, and even then it was only invented in the 1790s and wasn't fully implemented during the survey.

                                          They did a truly excellent job without any of today's high tech infrastructure but they made up for all these limitations by being brilliant.

                                          In today's modern world we often underestimate how inventive our forefathers were.

                                          • selkin 20 hours ago

                                            The pre-metric measurements in France weren’t imperial, but local: units had the same name, but different cities defined them differently. A livre[0] in one village was almost, but not quite, the livre used by the one only a couple toise[1] away.

                                            [0] about a modern pound, depending where you were. Toulouse’s livre was almost 1.3 modern pounds, for example.

                                            [1] about 13853/27000 meter.

                                            • hilbert42 17 hours ago

                                              You're right, I should have put 'imperial' in quotes as it's not the same as the British Imperial measurement. You'll note however I did distinguish the French system from the British one by referring to it in lowercase, that was intentional.

                                              The issue came up in a round about way on HN several weeks ago and I should have been more careful here because I wasn't precise enough in my comment then. As I inferred in that post 'imperial' nomenclature is used rather loosely to refer to measurement and coinage/currency as they're often closely linked (in the sense that the 'Crown' once regulated both).

                                              Pre-revolution French coinage used the same 1/12/20 number divisions as did the old English LSD and currencies in other parts of Europe, and that system is often referred to as 'imperial' coinage which likely goes back to Roman Imperial Coinage — but to confuse matters it was decimal.

                                              One can't cover the long historical lineage here except to mention the sign for the Roman [decimal] denarius is 'd' which is also used for the LSD penny, 12 of which make the shilling (£=240d).

                                              So for various reasons both 'old' physical measurement and 'old' coinage are often referred to as (I)imperial. To add to the confusion, modern currencies when converting from LSD/1/12/20 to metric and '1/12… measurement' are often done around the same time. Nomenclature overlaps.

                                              For example, I'm in Australia and the 1966 conversion from LSD to metrified coinage occurred shortly before the metrication of measurement. It was all lumped together as Imperial (note u/c) to Metric (that's how the public perceived it). The Government staged both changeovers close enough so that the reeducation of the citizenry wasn't forgotten by the time the measurement program started.

                                              For the record here's part of length in the old French measurement system:

                                              "Pied du Roi (foot) ≈ 32.48 cm (Slightly longer than an English foot, which is about 30.48 cm.)

                                              Pouce (inch) = 1/12 of a pied ≈ 2.707 cm

                                              Ligne = 1/12 of a pouce ≈ 2.256 mm

                                              Toise ≈ 1.949 metres (A toise is 6 pieds.) <...>"

                                              The other units can be found on the same site: https://interessia.com/medieval-french-measurements/

                                              • selkin 17 hours ago

                                                I think I wasn't clear about the point I was trying to make, because your comment seems unrelated to it.

                                                Pre-metrification there wasn't a French unit system, like we think about those today, where a meter in Paris is the same meter used in Limoges. The actual length of a ligne changed from one region to the next. There was no country wide standard of exactly how much a certain unit is. Such standards were regional, at best, sometimes the regions being as small as a single village.

                                                This is one of the most important results of the French resolution: a consistent system of measurements, regardless of the units chosen for it.

                                                • saalweachter 3 hours ago

                                                  The meter was also a bit of a gimmick, definitionally -- they wanted a unit that was about three (French/Paris) feet, but a definition that wasn't "my personal yardstick" so everyone would agree to it.

                                                  So they played around with various definitions like the 2-second pendulum, until they found one which worked and produced a single indisputable length.

                                                  (As opposed to picking something fundamental which was unrelated to previous units. Eg (not that they could have derived it at the time), the hydrogen line, the wavelength of the 1420MHz watering hole frequency, is human scale at about 21cm/8.3 inches, fundamental throughout the universe, and unrelated to previous units.)

                                                  • hilbert42 12 hours ago

                                                    Right. Essentially, before the Enlightenment systems of weights and measures didn't exist in the standardized way we know it today—measurements traceable to national/international standards, etc.

                                                    That's not to say local standards—let's call them weights and measures—weren't strictly adhered to and enforced. They were. There are many recorded instances from history to illustrate the point from, say, Archimedes' eureka moment to that of the obsessive and overzealous Issac Newton† when Warden of the Royal Mint was roaming around London checking for clipped coins and bringing the perpetrators to justice.

                                                    I'm fiercely pro-metric, and I've had much to say on the matter on HN over the years. So I'm used to the guns coming out from those in the US defending the Imperial system. I've good reason, at school I learned the Imperial system, CGS and MKS (it was before SI). In say physics learning to do things fluently in three different systems was a recipe for mistakes and confusion.

                                                    At the risk of repeating myself (link below), learning foot poundals, dynes and Newtons was bad enough but to have to convert between them in exams really was pretty rotten. The other reasons I've also menrioned, I've sat on standards committees and have writtern standards (nothing as illustrious as the ISO but it was for an intergovernmental organization nonetheless). Writing standards is often a tedious thankless task (I don't have to tell you people don't read them for the fun of it).

                                                    The link below is me getting worked up on HN over the metric system over a number of rolling posts, and it's not the first. I've referred to it here more for the sake of completeness than anything else. (I don't like rereading my old posts so I don't expect others to do so.)

                                                    https://news.ycombinator.com/context?id=43880977

                                                    † Newton. Not exactly weights and measures but a well documented case: https://coinsandhistoryfoundation.org/2021/04/30/sir-isaac-n...

                                                    • saalweachter 3 hours ago

                                                      The US doesn't use the Imperial system, it uses US customary units.

                                                      They're similar but very different.

                                                      An Imperial pint is 568 ml; a US pint is 473.

                                                      An Imperial hundredweight is 112 lbs. A US hundredweight is 100.

                                              • ahazred8ta 20 hours ago

                                                There was a 12:1 ratio between the foot ' inch '' line ''' and point '''' in pre-decimal engineering. Yes, they used triple prime marks. The typographic point was originally 1/144th of an inch. Watches are typically measued in french pointes.

                                                • batisteo 15 hours ago

                                                  Have you read the novel Le rendez-vous de Vénus by Jean-Pierre Luminet? If not you might love ite

                                              • nartho a day ago

                                                I always think about what a cool adventure it must have been, for Pierre Méchain and Jean-Baptiste Delambre to roam for 7 years, go wherever they need thanks to an official letter, make calculations and come back successful to Paris. To think that they were only off by .2mm !

                                              • bambax 21 hours ago

                                                Here's a completely random anecdote: my mother often told me that her father, my grandfather, born in France in 1899, sculptor, draftsman and general maker of things, had a strong dislike of the metric system. He complained continuously that anything with round metric ratios was "ugly" and that beauty could only be found in more ancient measuring systems.

                                                He died when I was 4 so it's not a first hand account, I'm not sure how much of it is true or what he really thought, but somehow it feels right.

                                                The metric system is incredibly useful and practical (of course) but there's something rigid and unpleasant about it.

                                                • Svip 19 hours ago

                                                  Nothing's stopping you from defining beautiful ratios and express the result in metric units, like ISO 216.[0] It feels like an odd complaint about the utility of the metric system, as if it is the only system; ratios aren't even units themselves!

                                                  [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_216

                                                  • IAmBroom 20 hours ago

                                                    I know modern craftsmen* who lament the same. Being able to divide things in 2, 3, 4, 6, or 12 is mechanically more useful than 2/5/10 (the former being achievable by drafting tools more easily).

                                                    *Yes, it should be craftspeople, but that doesn't exactly sound like the same thing, and anyway all of them happen to be men.

                                                    • claudex 7 hours ago

                                                      Nohting prevent you to use the metric system and use 60cm (for example) as a base unit for your construction. So you can easily divide it by 12 if you want.

                                                      • rags2riches 5 hours ago

                                                        Just one example I'm familiar with. Drywall typically comes in widths of 1200 mm and are mounted on studs 600 mm c/c.

                                                    • n1b0m 5 hours ago

                                                      “It fell to a pair of astronomers to calculate this distance, and after seven years, in 1799, they presented their final measurement to the French Academy of Sciences which made a "Metre of the Archives" in the form of a platinum bar.”

                                                      What unit did they use to measure the length of the platinum bar?

                                                      • nancyminusone a day ago

                                                        Things that annoy me about the metric system: base-10 numbering system, a liter is not a cubic meter, and 'kilogram' is the base unit, not 'gram'.

                                                        That last one is what I have the biggest problem with. When you are doing anything with derived units, 'kilo' suddenly disappears.

                                                        • kergonath a day ago

                                                          > base-10 numbering system

                                                          Having decimal numbers, it’s the best solution. Otherwise you’re bound to make mistakes scaling things up or down.

                                                          > a liter is not a cubic meter

                                                          Well, it’s a dm^3, close enough ;) Conversion is trivial, 1 m^3 is 1000 l. A cubic metre is a bit large for everyday use, but it makes sense e.g. when measuring water consumption or larger volumes. The litre also had the advantage of being close to 2 pints, so it already made sense as a unit when it was introduced. Contrary to hours with 100s.

                                                          > 'kilogram' is the base unit, not 'gram'

                                                          Yeah, this one is perplexing. It’s an annoying inconsistency on an otherwise beautifully regular system.

                                                          • GlobalFrog 21 hours ago

                                                            I don't understand your issue between gram and kilo gram: gram is the base unit and the prefix kilo, meaning one thousand just says that 1 kg = 1000 grams. It is exactly the same as meters and kilometers: meters is the base unit and 1 km = 1000 meters.

                                                            • DavidSJ 20 hours ago

                                                              In SI, kg is the base unit, and g is a derived unit.

                                                              • jillesvangurp 8 hours ago

                                                                There's an etymological reason for the word gram. It derives from a greek word γράμμα which roughly translates as "small weight" and made its way into French via the latin gramma to the French gramme, and the English gram. And 1kg is just very chunky. It wouldn't be right to refer to that as small.

                                                                As the name kilogram implies, gram is actually the unit here. But it was derived from the mass of a standard 1 kg chunk of metal that lives in a museum somewhere near Paris. This is the literal base unit of mass (at least historically, the definition has since been redefined using the Planck constant). A 1 gram chunk would have been tiny and be tedious to work with doing e.g. experiments with gravity.

                                                                They also have the original prototype meter in the form of a length of platinum-iridium alloy bar. And because the specific reference object for mass weighs 1kg instead of 1g, it means 1kg is the base unit in SI.

                                                                But quite obvious in the system of measurements, the gram is the logical unit here that you augment with prefixes and people commonly handle a lot of mass quantities that are in the order of grams rather than kg.

                                                                Derivations are simple. Simply apply powers of ten and their commonly used prefixes (kilo, milli, mega, micro etc.). The base unit is something physical that you can point at as the base unit. Or at least historically that was the intention.

                                                                There's also convenience. A 1l of water is about 1kg and a volume of 10x10x10cm. or 1 dm3. That's not accidental but intentional. It makes it easy to work with volumes and masses for people. Never mind that a liter of water isn't exactly a kg (because water purity, temperature, and a few other things).

                                                                • StopDisinfo910 6 hours ago

                                                                  Kilogram is indeed the base SI unit and not gram. It’s an exception.

                                                                  Every formula using SI will expect mass in kg and you will be off a factor of 1000 if you use gram as the base unit. Same with derivative units like the newton which all use mass in kg for conversion.

                                                                • selkin 20 hours ago

                                                                  It’s an historical artifact, as it was easier to manufacture a reference kilogram than a reference gram.

                                                                  Considering today we set the kilogram by fixing the Planck constant and deriving it from there, we can just divide each side of the definition by 1000 and use that as a base unit. Using kg as the base unit is completely arbitrary, as we can derive each unit of weight directly from the meter and the second, not from the base unit.

                                                                  • mmooss 11 hours ago

                                                                    Why not call the thing that weighs ~2.2 pounds a 'gram'?

                                                                    • selkin 9 hours ago

                                                                      For the same reason it was not renamed "Wug".

                                                                • tokai 21 hours ago

                                                                  I think they mean that the gram is defined as 1/1000 of a kilogram. With a kilogram having a definition based on physical constants.

                                                                  • jabl 20 hours ago

                                                                    The kilogram is no longer defined by a physical artifact, fwiw.

                                                                    Anyway, the point is the inconsistency in the system due to the kilogram being the base unit. So derived units are defined in terms of kilogram rather than gram. Say, the unit of force, Newton (N), is defined as kgm/s^2 and not gm/s^2). Or pressure, Pascal (Pa) which is N/m^2 which inherits N being defined in terms of the kilogram). And so on. Anyway, an annoying inconsistency maybe but doesn't really affect usage of the system once you get used to it.

                                                              • Ekaros 7 hours ago

                                                                Not adopting grav is my biggest hate with SI system...

                                                                • jl6 a day ago

                                                                  Why is base 10 annoying?

                                                                  • nancyminusone 21 hours ago

                                                                    Too few divisors of place values. The idea you would pick something that isn't evenly divisible by at least 3 or 4 was a mistake.

                                                                    This one isn't metric's fault to be fair. That's just what you get for inventing numbers before inventing math.

                                                                    Makes me wonder what would have happened if 'French numbers' in base 12, 36 or 60 were introduced at the same time.

                                                                    People got used to working in octal.or hexadecimal in the past for computers, doesn't seem like it would have been as big of a change as you think.

                                                                    • tokai 21 hours ago

                                                                      >evenly divisible by at least 3 or 4

                                                                      Irrelevant with a decimal system.

                                                                      • henrikschroder 6 hours ago

                                                                        The biggest source of communication issues around these unit systems is that in metric, you're supposed to reach for decimals when working with the units, and in imperial, you're supposed to reach for fractions when working with the units.

                                                                        Which is why the imperial lovers all cry out about their fractions not "working" in metric. Yes, exactly, that is the point. They don't understand that they're reaching for a tool they shouldn't be reaching for, and then they blame the unit system for it.

                                                                        • IAmBroom 20 hours ago

                                                                          Irrelevant if you are working with computers and digital equipment.

                                                                          Highly relevant if you are using T-squares, compasses, and dividing calipers.

                                                                          • mfost 20 hours ago

                                                                            It's just a matter of working with base elements that are divisible by 3 and 4 really.

                                                                            So instead of buying 100cm planks, buy 120cm planks?

                                                                            • philwelch 16 minutes ago

                                                                              And eventually you’re going to want a name for your 120cm unit. But that’s not allowed in metric because any named unit has to be base 10.

                                                                            • tempestn 16 hours ago

                                                                              It's pretty relevant with computers. If we were used to working in base-8 or base-16 in everyday life, numerous aspects of programming would be simplified.

                                                                            • chungy 21 hours ago

                                                                              It's not irrelevant, you can choose something like 12 to make all your factors out of. It's a particular strength of working in feet and yards.

                                                                              • henrikschroder 18 hours ago

                                                                                Except now you can't divide accurately by 5. Or 10.

                                                                                You're making an argument from familiarity. Yes, a 12-base system using fractions works very neatly in a small human-sized domain, but it disintegrates into complete uselessness outside that domain. That's why you get ridiculousness as things being 13/64th of an inch, or that there's 63360 inches in a mile. It's unworkable for very large distances and very small distances. With a metre and standard prefixes, you don't need any conversion factors, and you can represent any distance at any scale with a single unit.

                                                                                Quick, what's 11/64" + 3/8"?

                                                                                Quick, which weight is bigger: 0.6lbs or 10oz?

                                                                                • int_19h 7 hours ago

                                                                                  Obviously, the base should be the same for units as it is for numbers in general, but there are good arguments in favor of using 12 for both. Then all your examples become as simple as division by 5 is in decimal.

                                                                                  • philwelch 7 minutes ago

                                                                                    > 63360 inches in a mile

                                                                                    Nobody cares how many inches are in a mile. It doesn’t matter.

                                                                                    > Quick, what's 11/64" + 3/8"?

                                                                                    35/64. Was that supposed to be hard? Common denominators are elementary school level arithmetic.

                                                                                    > Quick, which weight is bigger: 0.6lbs or 10oz?

                                                                                    10oz. 10/16 is 5/8 which is .625.

                                                                                    I agree that metric is easier for people who don’t have a grasp of fifth grade arithmetic.

                                                                                    • chungy 15 hours ago

                                                                                      > That's why you get ridiculousness as things being 13/64th of an inch

                                                                                      Such fractions are very rarely used, you're more likely to use mils (1/1000 of an inch) at that scale.

                                                                                      > or that there's 63360 inches in a mile.

                                                                                      Likewise, something that will probably never come up in your life. Inches/feet/yards and miles just remain separate things, never mixed.

                                                                                      > With a metre and standard prefixes, you don't need any conversion factors, and you can represent any distance at any scale with a single unit.

                                                                                      There's no intuition for them. Knowing what a meter is does not help with getting a feel for a kilometer. They might as well be as separate as feet and miles at that scale.

                                                                                      > Quick, what's 11/64" + 3/8"?

                                                                                      That one's not even hard, it's just a fraction. 35/64"

                                                                                      > Quick, which weight is bigger: 0.6lbs or 10oz?

                                                                                      Another arbitrary problem that will probably never come up, but to entertain you: since 0.5 lbs is 8oz, adding 1.6oz to that (another tenth of a lbs) results in 9.6oz. 10oz is bigger than 0.6 lbs. Not hard, but at least mildly harder than the first question.

                                                                                      None of this really had to do with the convenience highlighted initially: 12 inches in a foot and 3 feet in a yard make extremely convenient divisible factors. You can trivially divide things by 2, 3, 4, and 6 and keep with whole integer values. The same definitely cannot be said of metric.

                                                                                      • Symbiote 7 hours ago

                                                                                        > Inches/feet/yards and miles just remain separate things, never mixed

                                                                                        How tall are you, maybe 70 inches? Or 5⅚ft?

                                                                                        178cm or 1.78m are so obviously equivalent it doesn't matter which is used.

                                                                                        > 12 inches in a foot and 3 feet in a yard make extremely convenient divisible factors.

                                                                                        This requires you to start with 12 inches. If you're making a cupboard to fit in an 18¾" (476mm) space, it's no use, or is only randomly useful.

                                                                                        If you can choose, then you can just as easily start with 36cm. For example, European kitchens are designed around a 300mm base size.

                                                                                        • chungy 6 hours ago

                                                                                          > How tall are you, maybe 70 inches? Or 5⅚ft?

                                                                                          Are you purposely doing this? That is obviously not what I meant. Nobody says "3 miles, 500 feet", they say "3.1 miles". Effectively two systems of distance measurement: inches/feet/yards (near scale), and miles (distant scale).

                                                                                          "5 feet 10 inches" is completely normal and fine.

                                                                                          > This requires you to start with 12 inches. If you're making a cupboard to fit in an 18¾" (476mm) space, it's no use, or is only randomly useful.

                                                                                          So you cut the cupboard to fit a 18¾" space, no big deal. Same as anything else, and just as random as 476mm.

                                                                                          Typically they come in (integer!) 12-inch, 24-inch, 36-inch, or 48-inch variants.

                                                                                          • saalweachter 3 hours ago

                                                                                            This is honestly the problem with critiquing any system from without: you don't know what's really wrong with it.

                                                                                            Fucking bushels, man.

                                                                                            • simpaticoder 2 hours ago

                                                                                              They are talking past each other. One is saying, "metric is better than imperial", the other is saying "imperial works". Neither claim is relevant to the other.

                                                                                      • tempestn 16 hours ago

                                                                                        5 and 10 are arbitrary numbers though. Halving and doubling are really the only special operations, and base-8 or base-16 would be superior to 10 or 12 for those.

                                                                                        • Symbiote 7 hours ago

                                                                                          10 is arbitrary, but it's also the base chosen for our counting system.

                                                                                          You can use hexadecimal numbers if you wish. "He's B6 cm tall."

                                                                                          I have found this, which seems neat: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibi-binary

                                                                                          So he's ki-ba cm tall.

                                                                                          • saalweachter 3 hours ago

                                                                                            Ugg, that naming system is the worst I've ever seen. It's like it's asking for you to mis-hear numbers. Use a range of consonants!

                                                                                  • chthonicdaemon 9 hours ago

                                                                                    I think there is true utility in choosing a unit scheme that matches your number scheme. So we use decimal numbers, makes sense to use decimal units. It seems you're arguing that the real mistake is using decimal numbers to begin with?

                                                                                    • forty 20 hours ago

                                                                                      Don't you think base 10 was used simply because it conveniently matches the number of fingers of Humans?

                                                                                      • nancyminusone 19 hours ago

                                                                                        Of course... But - look at your open hand right now. Count the number of segments on your 4 fingers - it's 12. You can even use your thumb as a pointer and count one handed.

                                                                                        • tempestn 16 hours ago

                                                                                          Or forget about the thumbs and just count fingers. 8 would be a better base than 10 for sure, and arguably better than 12. (Easier doubling and halving, easier binary conversions, but fewer integer factors and fewer digits.)

                                                                                      • foobiekr 20 hours ago

                                                                                        Base 60 is genuinely the best option.

                                                                                        • layer8 16 hours ago

                                                                                          That would have broken ASCII.

                                                                                        • empath75 19 hours ago

                                                                                          There's two reasons to use a measurement system -- one of those is for sort of every day work -- cooking, home carpentry and the like, and in that case, having something like the imperial system is nice, because you can divide things usefully.

                                                                                          The _other_ reason to use a measurement system is for doing _science_, and for that, having everything in base ten makes things _immensely_ easier, especially if you're working the math out by hand

                                                                                          • henrikschroder 18 hours ago

                                                                                            > because you can divide things usefully.

                                                                                            Again, this is just familiarity. You think it's super neat that you can divide a cup of whatever by 2 or 3 or 4, but if I tell you to divide it by 5, you're gonna deflect and ask me "who does that?!?"

                                                                                            Imperial works neatly for a small domain of problems, and is useless outside that domain.

                                                                                            Metric is less neat in that small domain, but works equally well everywhere.

                                                                                            • AStonesThrow 18 hours ago

                                                                                              Well no...

                                                                                              Firstly, we can divide a cup by 2, 3, and 4 in the kitchen because those are common measuring-cup sizes. Nobody is prevented from using a fractional size: if I divide a cup by 5 then I have 1/5th of a cup, nothing more and nothing less.

                                                                                              While 1/4th of a cup is 2 oz, and 1/3rd of a cup is 16 teaspoons, 1/5th of a cup doesn't divide evenly into a smaller unit and that's why "we don't do it", but there is nothing to stop the chef from using 9 teaspoons. [Or he can instinctively go up to 45mL on his graduated measuring cup, which almost always has both systems on it!] Teaspoons, tablespoons, ounces, cups, quarts and gallons are all inter-related multiples, and once you internalize it, you can convert like a boss.

                                                                                              While I'm sure it's lovely that metric measures divide by 2 and 5, that's all they divide by, so in terms of divisors, you've lost 3, 4, 6, 8...

                                                                                              So if it really is about dividing things usefully without resorting to fractions, then using a system that is nothing but multiples of 10 is a handicap, when we've had systems with lovely 12s and 16s with many different options for dividing them up.

                                                                                              But the metric people can simply chop up the measures even more finely and claim victory. For example, currency: it was in multiples of 16 or 8 which allowed for limited permutations. Decimalization chopped it into pennies, and we find 100 gradations in every pound sterling. All that did is make base-10 math easier for bean counters, and confuse people on the streets with a mystifying array of coinage. [Mental math indicates that it must increase the volume of coins per average transaction, as well.]

                                                                                              If a basic customary unit of length is an inch, many people can put two fingers together and estimate that on the human scale. But who can estimate or eyeball a millimeter?

                                                                                              Oh, and, have you ever found a nice British recipe in metric, shopped at your American grocery store, and prepared that in your American kitchen with your Fahrenheit range? You will eventually want to tip it all in the rubbish bin. Adam Ragusea suggests as much: https://youtu.be/TE8xg3d8dBg?si=SD8wLxD6ib6InLX4

                                                                                              • jeltz 6 minutes ago

                                                                                                > But who can estimate or eyeball a millimeter?

                                                                                                Probably most people in the world. I can for sure do it. It's trivial if you grew up with the system.

                                                                                                • kimmk 14 hours ago

                                                                                                  From an European view who has accustomed to imperial units, these discussions are so tiring. The metric vs imperial debates almost always come down to just personally preferring what you're familiar with. I've had the exact same feelings about imperial units as Americans express of metric. I really don't have a problem estimating what 10 cm or 1 kg or 1 kilometer or 2 degrees of Celsius difference in the weather is.

                                                                                                  And the division issue is almost trivial in my view; you can just take 120 cm or 12 gram quantity. You don't magically lose the ability to divide things by other than 10 or 5 or 2 when using metric. Its not like decimal fractions disappear in imperial systems either. The metric system is there for making it easy to scale things between orders of magnitude and have sane conversions between units.

                                                                                                  • chupasaurus 17 hours ago

                                                                                                    > If a basic customary unit of length is an inch, many people can put two fingers together and estimate that on the human scale. But who can estimate or eyeball a millimeter?

                                                                                                    If you'd grown with a metric system you could eyeball a centimeter with ease. Also comparing orders of magnitude different measures for estimation isn't fair, how precise would be your guess of a barleycorn?

                                                                                                    • henrikschroder 17 hours ago

                                                                                                      > Teaspoons, tablespoons, ounces, cups, quarts and gallons are all inter-related multiples, and once you internalize it, you can convert like a boss.

                                                                                                      "It's super easy if you're familiar with it!"

                                                                                                      Yes, that is exactly the problem that you are unable to see.

                                                                                            • cryptonector 17 hours ago

                                                                                              Er, `gram` most definitely is the base unit. Kilogram is what's handy for humans given how light a gram is.

                                                                                              EDIT: Yes, yes, SI defines the kg and then the g by reference to kg, but so what, notionally it's still the gram that's the base unit.

                                                                                            • rippeltippel 9 hours ago

                                                                                              > From 1983, a metre was considered the distance that light travels in a vacuum in 1/299,792,458 of a second (because light travels 299,792,458 metres per second).

                                                                                              So the speed of light was calculated using a previous definition of metre, and that magic number was used to upgrade its own definition? That's a tautology, sounds wrong to me.

                                                                                              • grey413 8 hours ago

                                                                                                There's a consistent effort to make all the SI metric units based off of discreet measurements of physical constants. The speed of light is a constant, and the SI second is "defined by taking the fixed numerical value of the caesium frequency ΔνCs, the unperturbed ground-state hyperfine transition frequency of the caesium-133 atom, to be 9,192,631,770 when expressed in the unit Hz, which is equal to s^–1"

                                                                                              • willsoon 7 hours ago

                                                                                                10 days a week? Why. Because we have ten fingers, oc. 13 months was a year in the matriarchy, the lunar months... 12 was the monarchy and the church. We are back to 12 bc it is divisible for more numbers. But the metre was the great FR's legacy. It is under a dome, and you pay if you want a copy of fraternity. A inch does not exists. It's a just a fraction of the Paris' metre.

                                                                                                • metalman 16 hours ago

                                                                                                  it could actualy be phrased the other way.... "the lack of a meter caused the french revolution" ok, no, but it most definetly contributed to the revolution, as France was a maze of competing local measurement "standards" that caused a lot of problems and expense in business and trade, some of it wildly subjective, like an acre of land was not an area measurement, but was based on how much grain a given piece of land could grow.......and at one point before the revolution, there had begun a highly contentious attempt to straiten the whole mess out

                                                                                                  • BitwiseFool a day ago

                                                                                                    As an American, I finally relented and purchased a Metric measuring tape after the ordeal of trying to measure the dimensions of the rooms in my house. When it comes to interior decorating, trying to figure out how to evenly space items that are sized in feet, inches, and fractional inches is a nightmare. Imagine trying to space objects 2 feet 7½ inches long against a wall that is 13 feet 2 inches long. Now imagine this task with 80 centimeter long objects and a ~400 centimeter wall.

                                                                                                    I am angry that IKEA's localization does not allow Americans to view dimensions in metric site-wide. You can still see dimensions in metric but those only appear on the pictures of some items. The webpage still converts all textual measurements to Imperial. You can't sort and search using metric values. IKEA designs everything in metric, using nice, even, whole numbers. Please let me see those. Seeing them converted to the nearest 32nd of an inch feels like vandalism.

                                                                                                    • Snild 21 hours ago

                                                                                                      It seems the Canadian site gives both sets of units: https://www.ikea.com/ca/en/p/brimnes-cabinet-with-doors-whit...

                                                                                                      I guess they thought the mere sight of metric would offend the Americans. :)

                                                                                                      Maybe the product ranges between the countries is close enough that the Canadian site is an alternative?

                                                                                                      • nautilius 4 hours ago

                                                                                                        To be fair, Americans use decimal already where it’s dearest to the heart: money, ammunition, and filling gasoline.

                                                                                                        • ThinkingGuy 30 minutes ago

                                                                                                          Don't forget prescription drugs (mg).

                                                                                                        • WillPostForFood 20 hours ago

                                                                                                          Imagine trying to space objects 2 feet 7½ inches long against a wall that is 13 feet 2 inches long. Now imagine this task with 80 centimeter long objects and a ~400 centimeter wall.

                                                                                                          You've made an artificially hard example (Ikea doesn't separate units, it is just inches).

                                                                                                          What's harder, a 24" object on a 160" wall, or a 59cm object on a 4m 3cm wall?

                                                                                                          Or to compare like for like (rounding & unified units), a 24" object on a 160" wall vs a 60cm object on a 400cm wall? Seems the same.

                                                                                                          • justinrubek 18 hours ago

                                                                                                            That's part of the point, though. Ikea might not do separate units, but this is not an uncommon practice elsewhere. In the metric example I don't need rounding because I can trivially see 4m 3cm and know it's 403cm. With inches I'd have to do multiplication to handle mixed units.

                                                                                                            • hungryhobo 18 hours ago

                                                                                                              but you have to do math to convert 13 foot 4 inches to 160 inches vs just moving decimals

                                                                                                            • bowsamic an hour ago

                                                                                                              I don’t understand why American things absolutely never have dual measurements. I’ve been reading books on pregnancy and newborns written in the US but available across the world and every table is in only US units

                                                                                                              • lysace 18 hours ago

                                                                                                                > Seeing them converted to the nearest 32nd of an inch feels like vandalism.

                                                                                                                Malicious compliance.

                                                                                                                As a non-American: I love it. ;)

                                                                                                                • lostlogin a day ago

                                                                                                                  > I am angry that IKEA's localization does not allow Americans to view dimensions in metric

                                                                                                                  I’m not American and laughed at this.

                                                                                                                  Welcome to the other side. Also, here in New Zealand people seem to do everything in metric, except their height and the weight of their baby. Why?

                                                                                                                  • remram 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                    As a Frenchman living in the US, my favorite Imperial units are the hand (3 hands to a foot) and the poppyseed (4 poppyseeds to a barleycorn, the shoe-size unit; 3 barleycorns to an inch). 10cm and 2mm.

                                                                                                                    People stop asking me to convert to Imperial pretty quick.

                                                                                                                    • BitwiseFool 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                      Save your sanity, don't bother learning the conversion factors. Did you know that most of us don't even know how to convert between our own units? I invite you to go around and ask 'how many pints are in a gallon?'.

                                                                                                                      It took me an embarrassingly long amount of time to realize that there are four quarts in a gallon...

                                                                                                                      I have no such trouble with any SI unit. So with that, I will leave you with this!

                                                                                                                      "For of all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these: 'The French were right again!'"

                                                                                                                      • toolslive 19 hours ago

                                                                                                                        > Save your sanity, don't bother learning the conversion factors.

                                                                                                                        They were drilled into my brain when I was in primary school: 10, 100 and 1000.

                                                                                                                        • Symbiote 7 hours ago

                                                                                                                          Even before real school started, I think many of us in Europe played with base ten blocks. As far as I know they are always centimetre-sized, so the 1000-cube is a litre.

                                                                                                                          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base_ten_blocks

                                                                                                                      • dragonwriter 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                        The US uses the US customary system, not Imperial. [0] US customary and Imperial share some units, and, confusingly, share even more unit names, but they are different systems.

                                                                                                                        [0] well, really, it uses metric with a redefined version of the old US customary system layered over it to prevent people from noticing, but...

                                                                                                                        • manarth 3 hours ago

                                                                                                                          That's a fairly long-standing pre-metric tradition.

                                                                                                                          In Sweden, 1 foot was around 28.96cm (in modern dimensions), whilst 1 foot in Amsterdam was 28.31cm.

                                                                                                                          On such differences (OK, and a few other contributing factors) a ship was sunk.

                                                                                                                          • BitwiseFool 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                            We've made an inconsistent and confusing system even more inconsistent and confusing. How apropos!

                                                                                                                            • saalweachter 3 hours ago

                                                                                                                              Hey, don't blame us for Britain going stone-mad after the Revolution and redefining all of their units in crazy ways. We weren't a part of it.

                                                                                                                              Now, choosing wine gallons as our standard gallon, that might deserve a little blame.

                                                                                                                          • saalweachter 3 hours ago

                                                                                                                            5 m = 1 rod; 5 furlong = 1 km.

                                                                                                                            Also, the US doesn't use imperial, dammit. It uses US customary units. They're related but different systems with radically different definitions on many units.

                                                                                                                            • geoffmunn 16 hours ago

                                                                                                                              I am 100% convinced that the baby weight thing is because grandparents love to compare newborns with their own experiences, and they were on the cusp of the metric conversion in the 60s. In a decade or two, this will vanish.

                                                                                                                              Imperial height is because 6 feet is the generic height of a "tall person" - we get so much of our sporting news from overseas and no one bothers to convert it.

                                                                                                                              • ahazred8ta 18 hours ago

                                                                                                                                In 1776 everyone was still using the Winchester System. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winchester_measure The UK didn't adopt the Imperial system until 1824-1826. Us Yanks have to suffer the indignity of our meager 473 mililitre pints.

                                                                                                                                • nancyminusone 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                                  The US doesn't and never has used the imperial system, as it did not participate in the unit reforms of 1824.

                                                                                                                                  5 us gallons is about 4 imperial gallons.

                                                                                                                                  • remram 20 hours ago

                                                                                                                                    I know that, but Americans don't and ask for "Imperial". No one has ever asked me for "US customary". Either way, I am using those units to be facetious more than compliant ;-)

                                                                                                                                    In practice the volume units are a much bigger problem. I have not hit anyone with the "cubic hand" yet...

                                                                                                                              • ThePowerOfFuet 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                                >I am angry that IKEA's localization does not allow Americans to view dimensions in metric site-wide.

                                                                                                                                Change to the IKEA site of a different country (via what comes immediately after `ikea.com/`).

                                                                                                                              • dudeinjapan 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                So did the guillotine, but that doesn't mean everyone should go around using them.

                                                                                                                                • toolslive 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                                  Still, wouldn't base 12 be better than base 10 ?

                                                                                                                                  • IAmBroom 20 hours ago

                                                                                                                                    Pretty much everyone born from -2,500 BCE to ~1800 CE would agree, and a significant of those born since.

                                                                                                                                    • sham1 18 hours ago

                                                                                                                                      Number bases are arbitrary. Like, base 12 certainly has interesting properties since it is a highly composite number, but a lot of the convenient representations can be achieved by using actual fractions instead of insisting on radix points/commas.

                                                                                                                                      For example, 1/4 being 0.3 in base 12 can make certain computations easier (just as a 1/3 being 0.4_12 would), but again, what's wrong with 1/4 and 1/3 respectively.

                                                                                                                                      Of course, things like duodecimal and base-6 are interesting to use, but at this point the convention is base-10 and it probably won't change for a while. It's kinda like the \pi Vs \tau debate, where even with all the elegance and easier pedagogy brought by the use of \tau as the fundamental circle constant, the existing convention does matter, and probably matters a lot more in general than the better alternative.

                                                                                                                                      Of course, this also applied to the SI units. It literally took a major historical revolution for these units to be a) defined and b) getting used over the old units.

                                                                                                                                      • timewizard 10 hours ago

                                                                                                                                        > Number bases are arbitrary.

                                                                                                                                        You could do it that way if you didn't care at all for how people actually use the system or what they would prefer; however, it's just your decision that's arbitrary, not the actual choice of "best base for worldwide everyday use."

                                                                                                                                        > 1/4 being 0.3 in base 12

                                                                                                                                        And 5/6ths is 0.A in hexadecimal base 12. The choice of a base should imply a choice of alphabet. For something like base 12 you may actually want to rediscover or invent new numeral characters.

                                                                                                                                        > but at this point the convention is base-10

                                                                                                                                        Except for time. Which appears constantly in physical units.

                                                                                                                                        > b) getting used over the old units.

                                                                                                                                        Even then. No one will tell you the sun is "93 Gm" from Earth. It's always 93 million km. They haven't exactly gotten into the new system just yet. They've just swapped base units.

                                                                                                                                      • ahazred8ta 19 hours ago

                                                                                                                                        https://dozenal.org/ The Dozenal Society of America would agree with you.

                                                                                                                                      • Xmd5a 15 hours ago

                                                                                                                                        The meter wasn't invented during the French Revolution, it evolved from ancient measurement systems based on the golden ratio.

                                                                                                                                        Traditional body measurements (thumb, palm, span, foot, cubit) follow a Fibonacci-like progression where each unit ≈ φ times the previous one. If we consider the Egyptian cubit as π/6 meters (which matches historical measurements), here's a possible insight:

                                                                                                                                        Draw a circle with diameter 1 meter. Remove 1/6 of the perimeter (π/6), subtract the diameter (1), and you get ≈1.618 – essentially φ. This geometric construction lets you build an entire measurement system using just a stick and basic geometry. Once you have any two consecutive units, you can generate the entire sequence by addition (palm + span = foot) or subtraction (span – palm = thumb's breadth).

                                                                                                                                        In the pre-metric French system, a span was exactly 20cm. When you scale 0.2 × φ² you get π/6 with 4-digit precision. But here's what's interesting: using our geometric approximation φ ≈ 5π/6 – 1, the equation 0.2 × φ² = π/6 works out *exactly*. The "approximation error" in φ perfectly cancels out due to φ² = φ + 1, making 0.2 × (5π/6 - 1 + 1) = π/6.

                                                                                                                                        Here's another "coincidence": Multiple 17th-century scientists (Mersenne, Huygens, Wilkins) proposed defining a universal unit as the length of a pendulum with a half-period of 1 second. Tito Livio Burattini, inspired by his travels in Egypt, formalized this in his "Misura Universale" (1675), measuring this pendulum length at 0.9939 meters - essentially our modern meter.

                                                                                                                                        The "revolutionary" meter system was really just formalizing measurement relationships that builders had been using for millennia. The French didn't invent it - they just gave ancient φ-based measurements a decimal makeover.

                                                                                                                                        • cooljoseph 9 hours ago

                                                                                                                                          It is possible to construct φ exactly with a straight-edge and compass. Would the approximation of 5π/6 - 1 be used because it's easier to calculate quickly?

                                                                                                                                          • Xmd5a a few seconds ago

                                                                                                                                            Yes φ is a constructible number and more generally an algebraic number, solution of the polynomial equation x^2 = x + 1. However π is not, and so is my approximation of φ as 5π/6. Here non-constructibility (in the mathematical sense) translates to the fact there is no method to "straighten" an arc into a segment using a compass and a ruler. But bear with me because the 5π/6 - 1 approximation of phi has more to say.

                                                                                                                                            First, the "conspiracy theory" that the meter is linked to Earth's dimensions and harmonizes with ancient measurement units through a shared reference actually predates the meter's definition. This idea was a thread of interest among the scientists who developed a universal measurement system – one that could be derived anywhere on the planet.

                                                                                                                                            >One can well sense that it can only be through comparisons of measurements made in ancient times & in our days on monuments still existing, that I can determine to how many of our toises the Geometers of antiquity would have evaluated a degree of Meridian. Now I find, 1st. that the side of the base of the great pyramid of Egypt taken five hundred times; 2nd. that the cubit of the Nilometer taken two hundred thousand times; 3rd. that a stadium existing & measured at Laodicea in Asia Minor, by Mr. Smith, & taken five hundred times; I find, I say, that these three products are each of the same value, & that each in particular is precisely the same measure of a degree [of a Meridian], which has been determined by our modern Geometers.

                                                                                                                                            Alexis-Jean-Pierre Paucton, Metrology, or Treatise on measures, weights and currencies, of the ancients and the moderns, 1780

                                                                                                                                            more context: https://anonpaste.pw/v/71abb0f8-5a03-4cb5-879a-d4f44ad6d57c#...

                                                                                                                                            original: https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k55491755/f126.item

                                                                                                                                            >Newton was trying to uncover the unit of measurement used by those constructing the pyramids. He thought it was likely that the ancient Egyptians had been able to measure the Earth and that, by unlocking the cubit of the Great Pyramid, he too would be able to measure the circumference of the Earth.

                                                                                                                                            https://www.theguardian.com/science/2020/dec/06/revealed-isa...

                                                                                                                                            Having said that(-1 downvotes!), let's recap:

                                                                                                                                            This is how we can construct a royal cubit from a circle of diameter = 1m:

                                                                                                                                            https://imgur.com/a/HmnfDKR

                                                                                                                                            φ = 2cos(π/5) lead us to this construction around a pentagon from which we can derive the "pige" or "quine" of cathedral builders (for now consider this is historically true) https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pige_(mesure)

                                                                                                                                            https://imgur.com/a/ZqprfAd

                                                                                                                                            What I mentioned earlier was that using a circle-based construction(diameter = 1m), one can derive a non-constructible approximation of φ, namely φ̃ = 5π/6 – 1, with the remarkable property that 0.2 × φ̃² = π/6, thanks to φ² = φ + 1.

                                                                                                                                            But what’s truly elegant is that this process has a symmetric counterpart, where we approximate π using φ. This time, we begin with a constructible triangle, sometimes called the triangle of the builders (1, 2, √5), whose perimeter is:

                                                                                                                                                t = (1 + 2 + √5)/10
                                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                            This value is fully constructible with compass and straightedge, and numerically it approximates π/6 to four digits. If we treat this `t` as a stand-in for π/6 in the previous formula:

                                                                                                                                                φ = 5t – 1
                                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                            we recover the *exact golden ratio*:

                                                                                                                                                φ = (5 × (3 + √5)/10) – 1 = (1 + √5)/2
                                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                            And then, going full circle:

                                                                                                                                                0.2 × φ² = t again
                                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                            In both directions, 0.2 (i.e., 1/5) emerges as the key scaling factor, bridging the decimal system, φ, and π through geometry. It ties together:

                                                                                                                                                - the constructible (t from the triangle),
                                                                                                                                                - the transcendental (π/6 from the circle), and
                                                                                                                                                - the algebraic (φ² = φ + 1)
                                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                            ^this is a new result I just found.

                                                                                                                                            For the historically conservative, arguments can be made that these considerations are pseudo-historical, that the "quine of cathedral builders" is an unsubstantiated myth. See the wikipedia link above for the "pige"

                                                                                                                                            or this recent article: https://classiques-garnier.com/aedificare-2021-2-revue-inter...

                                                                                                                                            this one too: http://compagnonsdudevoir.fr/?p=790

                                                                                                                                            >This greatly saddens those who have built an entire "operative" narrative around this kind of knowledge supposedly passed down in secret among the compagnons of the Tour de France for centuries… and have made it their pedestal. The question of how "tradition" is constructed among the compagnons (and incidentally among the Freemasons) remains a taboo that absolutely needs to be broken — and not just for the sake of advancing historical knowledge.

                                                                                                                                            Also this blog post traces the confabulation of the quine to Le Corbusier's Modulor system based on the golden ratio: https://blogruz.blogspot.com/2007/12/en-qui-quine.html

                                                                                                                                            >Le Corbusier considered various sets of proportions, notably using a human height of 1.75 meters, before settling in 1947 on a single set based on a height of 1.83 meters. He chose this because the associated Modulor measurement of 226 cm corresponds to within less than a millimeter of 89 inches — 89 being a number in the Fibonacci sequence that provides some of the best approximations of the golden ratio.

                                                                                                                                            >This system was intended to unite all nations around a universal standard, effectively casting aside the metric system, if not the decimal system entirely. We know how that turned out: the Modulor was essentially used for only one major creation — albeit a significant one — the Cité Radieuse in Marseille, completed in 1952, where all dimensions, down to the built-in furniture, are derived from the Modulor.

                                                                                                                                            Makes you think... The fact we don't have documents isn't surprising given that the campagnons (or later freemasons) communicated practical (then mystical) knowledge esoterically for political reasons (See https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compagnonnage).

                                                                                                                                            Nonetheless, the same motivations and the same quest for harmony (in the obsessive, symbolic sense) can be observed in Le Corbusier. As if the situation follows a geometric progression: in this sense, the "ancients" were as puzzled as we are by unexpected harmonies and actively sought them, and if you look at the historical sequence that lead to the definition of the meter, this is what you find.

                                                                                                                                            Compare the length of a greek foot with a roman foot: 30.87cm vs 29.62cm. The ratio matches 24/25 with 3 nines of precision. 24•25•7 forms a pythagorean triangle. As if the definition of some measurement units were retrofitted to facilitate conversion. If this kind of behavior leads to the formation of a strange graph of quasi-conversions or numerical coincidences, then maybe we could explain the emergence of patterns such as the 5π/6 - 1 approximation of φ without needing to argue for (or against) someone's intention behind what appears as a design choice.

                                                                                                                                            Alternatively the measures of the tools or geometric constructs that drive these conversions are idealized/approximated with a ratio, hence the delusion of the conspiracy theorists. But as I said, "ancients" had the same attitude, in particular with irrational numbers they wished to express as a ratio. Imagine the kind of problem the pseudo-phi <-> pseudo-π/6 complex I desribed above posed to people who where attempting to construct a straight line of length pi using only a compass and a straight-edge and establishing mathematics more rigorously. That's quite a nasty trap. Surely they found themselves in a mindstate that must not be that different from ours. Put in other words, the situation is hyperstionnal, and if we want to understand what is happening (whether this is an illusion or not) I think we should try to tackle this from a cognitive angle and model surprise explicitly.

                                                                                                                                            Some more links:

                                                                                                                                            https://www.messagedelanuitdestemps.org/les-principales-unit...

                                                                                                                                            https://martouf.ch/2021/03/le-metre-une-matrice-universelle-...

                                                                                                                                        • throwanem a day ago

                                                                                                                                          Yeah, I know. That's why I make fun of it some times. Not because it is French; though an American I hope I am not a damned ungracious American, and though I believe we may fairly call the original debt squared after Normandy, I recognize and respect the generous Gallic heart from which it sprang.

                                                                                                                                          But "the" metric system, so called, functions entirely on the happy coincidence of macroscopic distance being divisible at human discretion, while the similar and simultaneous effort at decimalizing time foundered on the rocks of how long it actually takes Earth to revolve upon its axis and to circle the sun. Both efforts originate in the same silly hamartiac human desire to prescribe a shape to which reality must conform, and thus may come in for about equal gentle contumely on that score. Especially since, in another example of its designers' foolishly misplaced priorities, metric offers no units at the human scale. They may have prefigured the brutalists in this way.

                                                                                                                                          • steamrolled a day ago

                                                                                                                                            The point of the SI system is not that one meter is "better" than one foot. It's that we picked one subjective point of reference and then made almost all the other units related to that in a straightforward way and scaled with a common set of prefixes.

                                                                                                                                            In everyday life, the metric system offers no big benefit, except for consistency for international standards and trade. But if you're doing anything engineering-related, your life is simpler if you don't need conversion factors to move between liters, meters, joules, watts, amperes, volts, ohms, and so on.

                                                                                                                                            And FWIW, even to the extent that US engineers sometimes use inches and Fahrenheit, almost everything else they do is anchored to SI.

                                                                                                                                            • kergonath a day ago

                                                                                                                                              > And FWIW, even to the extent that US engineers sometimes use inches and Fahrenheit, almost everything else they do is anchored to SI.

                                                                                                                                              Inches are defined relative to the SI as well.

                                                                                                                                              • IAmBroom 20 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                As are Fahrenheit degrees.

                                                                                                                                                • throwanem 20 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                  I don't know why people seem to think this is an "own."

                                                                                                                                              • bregma 19 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                > In everyday life, the metric system offers no big benefit

                                                                                                                                                That's not entirely true. An American driving across the Canadian border on an interstate can automatically go from 55 to 100. That's almost twice as much.

                                                                                                                                                • throwanem 17 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                  No it isn't. Our speedos are denominated both ways, it's cheaper, and I drive a Nissan with a V6 and paddle shifters. Not that that's much in any real sense! But neither is a Piper Archer, and those also have enough power to make 100kph feel extremely tame. It's not a high bar, is what I'm saying.

                                                                                                                                                • throwanem a day ago

                                                                                                                                                  Even when we use inches, they're frequently themselves metricated via division by 1,000 to produce the "thou." This is an extremely strong convention; I have one (inexpensive) digital caliper that can read in fractional inches, but every such tool I own reads in both millimeters and thou.

                                                                                                                                                  I do think it's funny all these folks insisting metric is so humanist seem never to have noticed which of their finger joints is an inch long. For me that's the second of the little finger, but I have large squarish peasant hands. As for the rest, treating a centimeter as 10/25 of an inch and vice versa seems to work well enough for measurements not requiring particular precision, or in other words anything I'd be comfortable doing without a caliper. Where's the trouble, really?

                                                                                                                                                  • int_19h 7 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                    > I do think it's funny all these folks insisting metric is so humanist seem never to have noticed which of their finger joints is an inch long.

                                                                                                                                                    People who grow up with metric instead notice which of their fingers is ~1 cm thick.

                                                                                                                                                    • alnwlsn 19 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                      Ah the joys of units! If you work cross-discipline, 1/1000th of an inch is called a 'thou' in machining. For PCBs (not unheard of to attach the two together), the same unit is called a 'mil'. Not to be confused with millimeter, even though it often is confused.

                                                                                                                                                      • lostlogin 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                        Where does the ‘humanist’ bit end?

                                                                                                                                                        Should we go back to fathoms, furlongs, chains, drams and bushels?

                                                                                                                                                        This was settled a long time ago for the vast majority of the word.

                                                                                                                                                        • bregma 19 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                          It's far more impressive to express gravity in units of stone furlong per fortnight squared. It's 7.14 x 10^10. Makes gravity on Jupiter look puny.

                                                                                                                                                          • throwanem 17 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                            It's that plus or minus about three orders, sure.

                                                                                                                                                          • throwanem 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                            If we should find they serve us better, why not?

                                                                                                                                                            • nancyminusone 19 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                              >bushels

                                                                                                                                                              Someone hasn't been to an apple orchard recently.

                                                                                                                                                              • fuzztester 17 hours ago
                                                                                                                                                                • throwanem 17 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                  Now, ironically given I'm for all serious purposes an English monoglot, you're speaking my language. Give me lakh and crore! Give me weights and measures where I can feel the history. Just like my mad 5,280-foot (1,360-yard) mile, which I love.

                                                                                                                                                                  And give me also the precise rational tenths-and-tens units, too, of course, for when we need accuracy more than soul. I work in thou all the time! All I've really been saying is, there's a place in the world for both ways of doing things. Why's everyone else so hellbent on having exactly one or the other?

                                                                                                                                                          • lostlogin 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                            > metric offers no units at the human scale.

                                                                                                                                                            How do you apply this to the imperial system?

                                                                                                                                                            I’ve heard this criticism before, but limited to temperature, with people saying they want more increments. I’m not sure why half a degree centigrade is so hateful.

                                                                                                                                                            • Mikhail_Edoshin 18 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                              A page of 8.5 x 11 units is more convenient to divide into parts than that of 210 x 297 units.

                                                                                                                                                              • throwanem 17 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                Yes, working to US letter size in my book blocks makes for fewer headaches over the guillotine cutter, whose scale is only graduated in 1/16 inches (0.0625", ~1.5mm) and whole millimeters. Oh, the wasted 20 thou would get cleaned up in the face finishing cut, but all the same, half an inch is a much more convenient quantum here than half a millimeter.

                                                                                                                                                              • throwanem 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                Fahrenheit has finer divisions at the human scale, yes. A scale calibrated to the boiling point of water, at the top end, can tell me nothing useful about my environment beyond the manner in which it has probably killed me.

                                                                                                                                                                • lrasinen 7 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                  It's the other end of the scale that's very relevant in northern latitudes (Celsius was Swedish, after all). Negative temperatures => it's freezing.

                                                                                                                                                                  A very common morning coffee table discussion (translated from Finnish):

                                                                                                                                                                  "What's the weather like?" "Plus all day" "Kids, wear your Gore-Tex shoes to school"

                                                                                                                                                                  • henrikschroder 18 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                    If Fahrenheit is better than Celsius because the units are smaller, doesn't that mean that the kilometre is better than the mile because it has smaller units?

                                                                                                                                                                    It is all subjective. You like what you grew up with because it is familiar, not because it is better. You know by rote memorisation how much 100 feet is and what 75F feels like, the same way I know by rote memorisation how much 50 meters is and what 25C feels like.

                                                                                                                                                                    • throwanem 17 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                      Show me where I have at any time argued one system is better than the other, as opposed to precisely that no system is strictly preferable, and I'll answer this point. Until then I can't and thus also won't.

                                                                                                                                                                      In the meantime your grasp of nuance or lack thereof is no pressing concern of mine. And my entire thesis has been flagrantly subjective throughout, save where the minor matter of relevant history is involved. To attempt to answer this with the charge of subjectivity, as though to do so accomplished other than to recapitulate what has been obvious all day, seems not only pointless but risible.

                                                                                                                                                                • kergonath a day ago

                                                                                                                                                                  > But "the" metric system, so called, functions entirely on the happy coincidence of macroscopic distance being divisible at human discretion

                                                                                                                                                                  What do you mean exactly? Any distance is divisible arbitrarily, it’s a continuous scale regardless of the unit system. We could define the metre as a foot (or rather, as the distance of some physical phenomenon close enough to a foot) and build a decimal system out of it, and it would have the same advantages as the metric system.

                                                                                                                                                                  > while the similar and simultaneous effort at decimalizing time foundered on the rocks of how long it actually takes Earth to revolve upon its axis and to circle the sun

                                                                                                                                                                  The fact that there are 60 seconds in an hour and 24 hours per day has absolutely nothing to do with how quickly the earth revolves. Your argument works (kinda) for the number of days in a year, that’s all.

                                                                                                                                                                  > Both efforts originate in the same silly hamartiac human desire to prescribe a shape to which reality must conform

                                                                                                                                                                  No, this is completely backwards. This effort originates from the idea that we should observe and understand nature, and build a rational society based on this understanding. The original metre was a fraction of the length of a meridian for a reason. They did not change the size of the Earth to conform to an arbitrary unit. Instead they came up with a unit that made sense to them, for both philosophical and practical reasons. They did the opposite of what you say.

                                                                                                                                                                  > Especially since, in another example of its designers' foolishly misplaced priorities, metric offers no units at the human scale

                                                                                                                                                                  The metre is about 2 thirds of an average human height (give or take, the average also changed with time). How is that not a human scale? If you want to go lower, to the scale of something you can hold, you have centimetres. If you want to go larger, to the scale of a distance you can walk, you have kilometres. And all conversions and comparisons spanning the 5 orders of magnitude relevant to our daily lives are seamless and make sense. What is your problem with this system?

                                                                                                                                                                  > They may have prefigured the brutalists in this way

                                                                                                                                                                  That is actually hilarious. The enlightenment philosophers and humanists who came up with the metric system are polar opposites of the brutalists. They rationalised our understanding of the world around us. They did not rebuild it square.

                                                                                                                                                                  • throwanem a day ago

                                                                                                                                                                    > They rationalised our understanding of the world around us. They did not rebuild it square.

                                                                                                                                                                    This is a distinction without a difference. Read James C. Scott, for pity's sake.

                                                                                                                                                                    • kergonath 19 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                      Well, no. I am not going to go through a collection of books by a random guy because someone said so on the Internet. If you can articulate the point you want to make, maybe. If the point cannot be made, I am not sure why I should be interested.

                                                                                                                                                                      • throwanem 19 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                        The short version is that you have this entirely backward and the "rationalizing" you describe not only remakes the world but does so by means of gruesome violence, and it is no accident the twitchy, haunted neurotics who attached their numericalizing madness to the Red Terror, had to go to such hideous lengths to get themselves taken at all seriously. We are not required to do the same two hundred years on, simply because they happen to have been on the side that wrote the history.

                                                                                                                                                                        The long version is Seeing Like a State.

                                                                                                                                                                        • olau 18 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                          Seeing like a state does not argue against the meter system.

                                                                                                                                                                          It just explains that many of these things got traction despite the resistance against them only because the state needed them.

                                                                                                                                                                          In the case of measurement units, one was that the natural units varied in size and could be gamed, which is a big problem for fair tax collection.

                                                                                                                                                                          • throwanem 17 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                            I don't suppose I expected to need to clarify the difference between citing a work whose thesis informs my own, and quoting from a work where my thesis is actually stated. But it now being evident I was optimistic: This is the first one.

                                                                                                                                                                  • Zanfa a day ago

                                                                                                                                                                    You mean like my feet aren’t a foot long, my thumb isn’t an inch? Ironically, my pinky is a centimeter thick and a meter is when I take a long step.

                                                                                                                                                                    • Joker_vD a day ago

                                                                                                                                                                      The width of my palm (with my thumb, tightly pressed to it) at its widest is 10 centimeters, which is quite handy.

                                                                                                                                                                      Oh, and my "inch" is almost exactly 3 centimeters.

                                                                                                                                                                      • capitainenemo a day ago

                                                                                                                                                                        There's a couple of convenience approximations I use to work with US Imperial..

                                                                                                                                                                        30cm is a "metric foot" (it's actually even closer to 1 light nanosecond which is kinda cool for thinking about distances at computer speeds)

                                                                                                                                                                        250ml is a "metric cup"

                                                                                                                                                                        • lrasinen 7 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                          I usually go with 240 ml if scaling down and there are fractions involved for slightly cleaner numbers.

                                                                                                                                                                          Another "close enough" value is the binary inch of 25.6 mm. Makes dealing with /32s and /64s oh so much easier.

                                                                                                                                                                          • lostlogin 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                            Speaking of feet - I got irritated when buying shoes and trying to convert shoes sizes.

                                                                                                                                                                            It turns out that UK/US sizes are based on the length of a barley corn.

                                                                                                                                                                            Quite why it isn’t just in centimetres is baffling. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoe_size

                                                                                                                                                                            • throwanem 21 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                              I'll give you this one, but only with the qualification that inches would be fine too. There's no benefit to the manufacturers in more rational standardization, though. As with women's clothing sizes, why would Levi's (for example) make it easier for me to find something that matches my style and budget, from anyone other than them? Hell, even men's sizes which nominally are in inches do this! I have to go a size up in Levi's vs Wranglers because Levi's size small, the bastards, while Lee mostly run true to size but none of their cuts is really worth wearing. And don't even talk to me about boot sizes!

                                                                                                                                                                              Inches vs. centimeters? Baby stuff. Get on my level. :D

                                                                                                                                                                            • throwanem a day ago

                                                                                                                                                                              And now the famous triviality of order-of-magnitude and unit conversion goes entirely out the window...

                                                                                                                                                                              • coxmi 7 hours ago

                                                                                                                                                                                That’s where duodecimal comes in…