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Call To Power 2 Cradle 3+ mod in progress: https://apolyton.net/forum/other-games/call-to-power-2/ctp2-creation/9437883-making-cradle-3-fully-compatible-with-the-apolyton-edition
I think the metric system is great in everything but temperature.
Nah, tempature is what metric's best at. After living in scandinavia for a few years a loooooooooong time ago my whole family thinks in metric when it gets cold but uses metric for nothing else (including summer temperatures ). Having 0 be freezing just makes so much sense.
Temperature fluctuations are fairly large in the US, especially in the northeast Fahrenheit fits nicely since almost any day will be between 0 and 100 degrees F. Anything below 0 is "really really cold" anything above 100 is "really really hot". -18 C to +38 C just doesn't have the same feel.
Other than temperature though, metric is superior IMHO.
Originally posted by Asher
I find feet/inches better for every-day things like describing people
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Originally posted by Sir Ralph
Wow, you find room temperature (~18°C) hot?
That was English self deprecating humour.
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Originally posted by Odin
Why is my country so stubborn when it comes to switching to the metric system? I laugh everytime a person has to use a calculator to convert pounds to ounces or feet to miles; if it was metric one would only have to divide or multiply by powers of 10. I am sick of having to convert degrees F to degrees C when I read scientific things.
hi ,
, you should have put a poll up
ones you are in the states , you dont have to worry , the weather is given at cnn in both c and f , .....
the distances are in miles , ....
the other way in europe , ....
dont worry , homeland defense says its great for confusing future terrorist's , .....
In the long run it would be good to switch to metric but we won't just like the British will never switch to left hand drive cars.
I must confess I have never known how long a furlong is nor exactly how many hands are in a foot but for some reason all the horse racing info is always in these units.
Originally posted by DAVOUT
Sorry for those who advocate for the US to adopt the metric system, but when M. Bush will realize where it originates from, it will no longer be an issue ...
Thankfully he never will realize where it originated from.
I'm building a wagon! On some other part of the internets, obviously (but not that other site).
Originally posted by Alexander's Horse
We've had metric for more than 20 years but I still roughly convert some things like weight, distance and area.
That's because my main beef with metric is that some of the standard units are too small or large. For example a mile is a good distance whereas a kilometre seems a bit short. Conversely an acre is an area you can visualise but a hectare is too large.
IIRC, the metric system came from the French enlightenment, and as such I come from the country which is most used to the metric system.
The things you are referring to (kilometres being a bit short, feet being a convenient measure for a person's size etc.) are very bound to the being used with one system or another. I personally am 1,76 metres high, and it is very precise in ym head. OTOH, if you tell me I'm 5+something feet, I won't understand what you are talking about.
The French authoirities imposed the metric system at a large scale in the education system at late 19th century, and it was difficult for a whole generation , like evey time a paradigm changes. However, for us post-19th-century French people (and Europeans in general except for the backwards Rosbifs ), measures are now much, much more convenient. Once you are used to it, you picture an hectare much better than an acre, or you picture a centimetre much better than 1/3 of an inch. The key is really in being used to it.
The metric system is undoubtedly more easy and more rational than the imperial system (I think that's the name). But I agree it would take a whole generation to be fully used to it, which isn't easy.
When I was in the US, I noticed most maps were in metric as well as imperial. I thought it was a step in the good, metric, direction
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