• atzanteol
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    1 year ago

    I’m happy with metric generally speaking - except for Celsius when talking about ambient temperature. I will die on that hill. Freezing/boiling point of water is a ridiculous point of reference for temperature as experienced by humans.

    Fahrenheit: 0 = really cold; 100 = really hot

    Celsius: -17.778 = really cold; 38.333 = really hot

    Not to mention that the Celsius grading is too big requiring use of tenths when discussing weather and setting a thermostat…

    • FreeFacts@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      What? I have never ever had a discussion in my life about tenths of celsius when discussing weather or thermostat. Nobody does that. The units are small enough to be used in majors.

      Freezing is excellent point of reference when you think about what effects it has on our lives. When water freezes, roads get frozen. When water freezes, pipes might blow up. When temperature reaches 0 Fahrenheit, nothing happens. Everything is same as 1 fahrenheit, or -1 fahrenheit. Nothing has changed, it is completely arbitrary.

      • atzanteol
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        1 year ago

        Many Celsius thermostats increment in .5 degrees. Both systems are completely arbitrary.

        • HelloThere
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          1 year ago

          This is literally all about what you’re used to.

          From my “UX” I know that

          • < -10 = I can literally feel the heat being sucked from my bones
          • < 0 = fucking cold, big coat and gloves
          • < 10 = big coat, maybe gloves if you’re feeling soft
          • < 15 = light jacket, especially if sitting around a lot
          • < 20 = t-shirt weather
          • < 25 = t-shirt and a beer garden
          • <30 = absolute murder, unless you’re on holiday when it’s great
          • 30+ = kill me now

          I have no idea what 70F is - because I’ve never used it.

            • HelloThere
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              1 year ago

              70% of what?! What I consider hot, living in the north of England, is very different to what someone in Spain, or Nigeria, would consider hot.

              Temperature isn’t volume, no one can conceptualise a 70% reduction in temperature because it’s literally not how any one, nor any scale other than Kelvin, considers it.

              You can’t, like, grab heat and go “oh yea, there’s less here”.

              Absolute clown shoes.

              Edit: typos, various shit.

                • HelloThere
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                  1 year ago

                  Temperature above 100 F enter dangerous zones just like below 0 enter dangerous zones.

                  Except that’s not true, the deadly zones start earlier than that.

                  A heat-period is defined as day(s) on which a Level 3 Heat Health Alert is issued and/or day(s) when the mean Central England Temperature is greater than 20°C; between June and August 2022, there were five heat-periods that met this criterion.

                  https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/deaths/articles/excessmortalityduringheatperiods/englandandwales1juneto31august2022

                  20C is 68F, 30C is 86F.

                  While the report does make it clear that these were already vulnerable people who were already expected to die soon - within weeks or maybe months - it was the heatwave that pushed them over the edge.

                  In the UK, with our brick houses built to absorb and retain heat, and absence of AC, average temps above 20C/68F do kill.

                  Similarly, it’s reported that two thirds of the deaths in the 2021 Texas storm were due to hypothemia, in a state where houses are also built to shed heat. For the majority of the state, as seen in the article below, the temps were negative C but above 0F. I also think it’s fair to suggest a good many of these people were likely already vulnerable.

                  https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-56095479

                  I absolutely agree that 0F and below temps are even colder, and even more deadly, but to suggest that is where it starts to be deadly is wrong.

                  Ultimately how humans experience and deal with tempurature has nothing to do with the scale we use to measure it, but what it is compared to what we are used to and how prepared we are to protect ourself against being “too hot” or “too cold”. It’s pretty much a perfect example of subjectivity.

                  If you prefer to use F than C, or K, or any other method, then go for it. But to try and argue that either method is inheriantly better or superior based solely on subjectivity is a fools errand.

                  Everything in metric is defined around distilled fresh water. The temp scales between 0-100 for solid/ice and gas/stream, and because water is almost incompressible then weight, quantity and volume all interact as well (1kg of water = 1 litre, 1 metre^3 = 1000kg = 1000litres).

                  Is that easier? I bake a lot, so not having to measure volume for water and instead being able to use weight as a 1:1 conversion sure makes easier when hydrating mixtures - but my oven being at 200C or ~400F makes no practical difference. Again it’s just what we’re used to.

                  That said, and I get why they were invented, but using cups, and thus volume, for compressible ingredients like flour honestly makes no sense. But now we’re wildly off topic.

    • CoderKat@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      But hot and cold is relative. It’s largely up to experience to have a feel for temperature. Eg, what temperature do you need a jacket in? In Celsius, around zero is jacket weather. What’s room temperature? It’s a pretty arbitrary 20ish C vs 70ish F either way.

      I could just as easily say Celsius has nifty ten degree bands for weather. 0 to 10 is chilly fall weather. 10 to 20 is nice late spring weather. 20 to 30 is summer weather. 30 to 40 are the hottest summer days. 0 to -10 is mild winter. -10 to -20 are the cold winter days. -20 to -30 are the coldest days in a place like Toronto.

      For outside weather, I’ve never seen anyone use tenths. Thermostats (for inside) in Celsius usually use half degree granularity.

      • agitated_judge
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        1 year ago

        I generally agree with you, but I guess how you experience these depends on where you live and what you’re used to. For me, it would be something like:

        • 30 to 40C: really hot summer noons
        • 20 to 30C: nicest range overall. Summer nights and autumn/spring days.
        • 15 to 20C: comfortable if you move around, working, doing sports etc
        • 10 to 15C: starting to get cold. Need jacket
        • 0 to 10C: winter cold
        • -10 to 0C: my balls are freezing
        • -20 to -10C: once or twice in a lifetime. Not going out at all until it gets warmer.
        • < -20C: are you fucking kidding me?
        • ted
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          1 year ago

          Man, sometimes I’m relieved when it’s only -20°C. At least my eyelashes don’t turn to icicles.

        • Hagarashi8
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          1 year ago

          Man, -15 is kinda nice weather for going outside and eat ice scream.

      • Bardak@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Thermostats (for inside) in Celsius usually use half degree granularity.

        I find it is hit or miss if a thermostat gives 0.5C or 1C for granularity. Even when the do have half degree increments I always just use whole degrees.

    • Ludwig van Beethoven
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      1 year ago

      See, the problem with the Fahrenheit = percentage thing is that it DOES NOT WORK. how I am supposed to know how 50% of “very hot” feels like. ig it’s something “”“neutral”“”. Oh wait it’s 10°C, i need warmer clothing. You need to get used to a temperature measurement, however logical you think it is. Tenths are a non-issue.

      Excuse my unprofessionalism

      • atzanteol
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        1 year ago

        It works better than “-20 to 40” tho.

    • DrM@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      It’s really hot for a human way before 100°F, it’s becoming uncomfortable when it’s more than 77°F (or 25°C for most humans. The “100 really hot” part is not really a benefit for anyone.

      Also the point when water freezes is pretty important in the winter. You can see immediately that you have to drive carefully when the temperature is close to 0°C. So I think 0° freezing makes the most sense.

      However: Temperature of boiling water is useless, that’s true.

    • rx8geek
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      1 year ago

      Sorry these arguments about the superiority or otherwise of a unit of measurement are just silly.

      It is 100% related to what you grew up with and are familiar with.

      No one who grew up with Celsius has any issue discussing weather or adjusting thermostats and the only people who struggle would be people who didnt grow up with it.

      • atzanteol
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        1 year ago

        Sorry these arguments about the superiority or otherwise of a unit of measurement are just silly.

        Well… Yeah, of course.

    • Murdoc
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      1 year ago

      Celsius: -17.778 = really cold; 38.333 = really hot

      That looks silly because it’s completely arbitrary, set to what you are used to. There is no universal “human experience”. Where I’m from temperature typically ranges from -30 c to +30 c, which seems pretty nice and balanced compared to imperial’s -22 f to 86 c which looks silly now, doesn’t it?

    • emhl@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Fahrenheit automatically disqualifies itself from being a serious unit, because it has an inconsistent scale

      • atzanteol
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        1 year ago

        This reply really confuses me - in what way is the scale inconsistent?

        • emhl@feddit.de
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          1 year ago

          The original definition is using three points:

          • A random human’s body temperature defined 96°F
          • Freezing point of Water defined 32°F
          • A weird Water salt ice mixture to defined 0°F

          Because of that the scale of Fahrenheit was different above the Freezing point of water and below, requiring to redefine the temperature at the reference points multiple times (and not by an insignificant amount)

          • atzanteol
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            1 year ago

            The original definition of Celsius (centigrade) was reversed with 100 being the freezing point of water and 0 being the boiling point. I’d say a “non-insignificant” change.