Will the rest of the world ever switch completely to the metric system? What's with these illogical years and months, they're all on different scales! It's crazy! Where's my kiloseconds?
Hah, good point.
Years are rotations of the sun, days are rotations of Earth. Other units are based around trying to make these work together, with the Month being a rough approximation of moon cycles standardized to work within a year. It's ugly, but so is the alternative, which either requires re-definition of SI unit of time (the second), or else doesn't fit into day-cycles at all.
No, while the year, month, and day standards are indeed astronomically based, week (7 days), minute (60 per hour), and second (60 per minute) are human-invented. For instance, we use 60 minutes and seconds because the Babylonians used base 60, and they're the ones who came up with them.
Pretty sure every car in the US has both on the gauges.
Indeed, with standard large and metric small.
Every country uses hands. It's a measurement for horses.
I feel like you could convince the American public pretty quickly if you explained to them that imperial was invented and standardised by the British for use in their colonies.
That's not entirely true, actually -- the US uses a variant of the British system that predates that 1824 Imperial standard (because it's what we were using at the time of the American Revolution). The standard US customary system is not the same as the Imperial system, not exactly. Calling the US system "Imperial" isn't entirely accurate.
It is still a British system, but the Metric system is French... as if that's better?
I don't get how the Fahrenheit scale makes more sense because "100 is really hot and 0 is really cold".
How does that even make sense?
Where I'm from, the temperature almost never gets below 15 degrees Fahrenheit and it rarely surpasses 85 degrees.
"Really cold" can be 30 degrees to someone living in a warm place or it can be -5 to someone else... it's all relative, whereas celsius is actually logical AND it uses the same scale as Kelvin, convenient!
Fahrenheit degrees are nearly twice as precise. Don't forget that. 180 degrees from freezing to boiling instead of 100.
Also, of course temperatures people are used to vary, but that doesn't change the general point.
I don't get how people can say this. Below 0C, there are huge changes in the environment. Rain turns into snow, wet roads turn into icy roads. Plants freeze and die. I have no idea what the freezing point of water is in F, but having it at 0 makes perfect sense in daily life.
Above 0 = Not winter weather
Below 0 = Winter weather
I guess it makes less sense if there is no winter where you live.
Huh? It's not exactly hard to remember that freezing is at 32. Pretty simple.
I don't think the government is the issue. Administration can change rules almost instantly, whatever its age (and actually did, that's why so many US governmental institutions already switched to metric). The "problem" comes from the population, they're the ones not wanting to change their habits, and it'll always be the case whatever the age and size of the country.
Right, and things like that British effort to ban Imperial scales and such would be unthinkable in the US... I don't think the government could possibly get away with something like that even if they wanted to.
Again, why do we need to change?
We don't.
It's really annoying when it's used exclusively with no metric conversions on US websites. It might be fine for someone in the US who can understand both units, but it feels like a big middle finger to the rest of the English-speaking world.
I have a rough idea of how long and inch is (~2.5cm) but it's a pain in the ass when Engadget or some other site lists the thickness of something as 0.78" and I have to go through the process of converting it every single time, just because the US is using a different standard than everyone else.
That's your problem, not ours. And anyway, most Americans have plenty of issues like that, like with distances in kilometers and such... how far is that? No idea. At least meters are simple, since they're nearly identical in length to yards.
So 'fuck everyone else' is the general mindset in the US in regards to international cooperation and standardisation? Gee, for a moment I thought the Europeans were exaggerating.
No, I'd say that it really is true that America does not like the idea of doing things because other countries say we should... particularly conservative Americans, but plenty of liberals support the Standard system over Metric too.
It's not just the "ingrained" defense, there's also a huge cost. Just for the highway and interstate infrastructure, it would require millions (probably billions) to change mile markers, and almost every state would have to change every interstate exit numbers, since they're based on mile markers.
Yeah, there are mile markers on all American highways, and they would all need to move (and they'd need a lot more of them, if they changed to kilometer markers). They would also need to renumber the exits on most American highways, since as you say most use mile-based numbering. And of course all highway signs in the country would need to be repainted, both the speed limit signs and the distance markers. That would all be hugely expensive.
It may be based in the US, and have a disproportionately high amount of US-specific content, but it serves an international audience - at least 120 million native English speakers who don't live in the US and don't understand US customary units.
I'm also not aware of any English European sites that have the same coverage as the likes of The Verge or Engadget.
It's not a huge annoyance, but it's a stupid barrier to communicating some information that wouldn't exist at all if the US government had the guts to metricate 30-40 years ago like everyone else did.
They didn't because Americans refused, pretty much. And we were right to do so.
As far as I know, he was never really involved with the Nazis. He even wrote an affidavit to the Army to that effect. He was a leading scientist who only really cared about building rockets. If he didn't join hitlers party they were gonna cut his funding.
Its alot different from a military officer, commanding troops.
That is perhaps true, but he was a rocket scientist, and showed absolutely no sign that he cared about the slave labor (and mass death) at the factories that made his rockets. He only cared about the rockets, not any of that other stuff. All things being equal, he probably was a war criminal. But he got off because we wanted his rocket knowledge.
This is false. Metric is used in everyday things from cooking to drugs.
Hell I live in Europe and can use both without a problem.
What? Very few Americans use metric for cooking, no. You use standard. Cups, teaspoons, etc.