It’s impolite to use only Fahrenheits on an international forum. Most readers won’t be able to make heads or tails of “103 degrees”, so a person posting on an international forum should definitely bother checking what that’s in Celcius. It’s much less work for the person writing the text to check that than thousand individual readers checking the same thing on Google.
If it’s somehow “okay” to ignore the 95 % of the world that has no idea of Fahrenheit, then it is similarly okay to be as if Fahrenheit didn’t exist.
I simply let the impolite person taste his own medicine. And no, I still don’t know if “103 degrees” equals 30°C, 45°C or 55°C. But the description “very uncomfortably hot” is absolutely enough to get what the person was talking about. So, some temperature that is unusual where the person writing the comment lives.
It’s a post blasting the US. I think it would be safe to assume responses to the contrary would be people in the US. Also, common sense and minimal thought would be enough to figure out the units given the number.
Maybe as an engineer I should require everyone to only give me temps in Kelvin…
When people give a temp in C, I convert it to F like anyone capable of reading/writing should be able to do. I’ve lived in Europe but I haven’t internalized the conversion very well. I would think someone might be able to convert it the other way as well. It is okay to just say, “I don’t like the US and I want to be an asshole.” You know, if that’s the case. None of us have any idea, your motives are completely obscured from our discernment.
Just remember a few points on the scale and kinda eyeball it from there. 98.6(37C) is human core temp, 68(20C) is a pleasant day, 32(0C) is just hitting the freezing point of water. Interestingly the scales converge at -40.
Nah, I don’t have anything like that against US.
But out in the rest of the world it just makes sense to use standard units. Live the way you live in the US, but when you come elsewhere, including the parts of Internet not meant for US inhabitants only, do in Rome as Romans do.
The US doesn’t only make up only 5% of Lemmy though. I can’t find data, but it feels like 40% or more. I don’t complain when German people post in German. No need to complain when people from the US post using Fahrenheit.
I disagree with the person you are responding too (I don’t think it’s impolite to use F), but to be fair C to F is “double and add 32” (technically 9/5+32), which is very easy to compute, while the reverse is -32 and then /2, which is generally harder (I think most people find subtractions harder).
Not my experience. I spent some 4 months at Goa in India, and it was usually around 40°C. I rented a bicycle there and rode it for distances of over 100 km in a day. And I did not sweat.
That temperature should not be a problem for a person living in an area where that’s a common temperature. And if it’s not a common temperature, then it’s not common, and it’s not really a problem to have to pay the taxi if you need to go to an important meeting precisely on the one scorching hot day :)
I was assuming from the context that it would translate to more like 50°C or so.
It might be that’s because I went to India by hitchhiking, and did that through South-East Asia, and that took quite a bit of time 🙂
My body had plenty of time to incrementally adjust to the climate as I was making my way southwards.
I’m guessing that you mostly spend your time in spaces with AC and your body never gets acclimated to the 40°C temperatures? Or maybe those temperatures take place so seldom where you live that you’ve has no chance to adapt? I’m not really used to AC, so I keep it off if possible even where it’s available.
Anyways, if you look at videos of everyday life of locals in Goa, they aren’t really constantly dripping sweat. At least I don’t have any memory of having sweated very much during my time in Laos, Thailand, Burma and India. Even if there was some level of constant sweating, it absolutely hasn’t been enough to disturbing in smell or visually, because otherwise I’d have a memory of it.
you don’t need to move at all to be dripping with sweat on a 103 day
Then what does the bike have to do with it? (Also, how hot is a 103 day?)
If you were in a car you wouldn’t be hot. 103 is very hot, not safe for old people to be outside for very long. It’s 103 degrees, so quite hot
“103 degrees” means that it’s hot enough for water to boil. Water boils at 100 degrees, unless you’re deep underground.
But okay, it sounds like that’s a very rare temperature, then?
There are two types of people in the world:
— Those who can extrapolate from incomplete data sets
bro you know what units I’m using, don’t be obtuse
are you this dense on purpose?
Heh.
It’s impolite to use only Fahrenheits on an international forum. Most readers won’t be able to make heads or tails of “103 degrees”, so a person posting on an international forum should definitely bother checking what that’s in Celcius. It’s much less work for the person writing the text to check that than thousand individual readers checking the same thing on Google.
If it’s somehow “okay” to ignore the 95 % of the world that has no idea of Fahrenheit, then it is similarly okay to be as if Fahrenheit didn’t exist.
I simply let the impolite person taste his own medicine. And no, I still don’t know if “103 degrees” equals 30°C, 45°C or 55°C. But the description “very uncomfortably hot” is absolutely enough to get what the person was talking about. So, some temperature that is unusual where the person writing the comment lives.
It’s a post blasting the US. I think it would be safe to assume responses to the contrary would be people in the US. Also, common sense and minimal thought would be enough to figure out the units given the number.
Maybe as an engineer I should require everyone to only give me temps in Kelvin…
When people give a temp in C, I convert it to F like anyone capable of reading/writing should be able to do. I’ve lived in Europe but I haven’t internalized the conversion very well. I would think someone might be able to convert it the other way as well. It is okay to just say, “I don’t like the US and I want to be an asshole.” You know, if that’s the case. None of us have any idea, your motives are completely obscured from our discernment.
Just remember a few points on the scale and kinda eyeball it from there. 98.6(37C) is human core temp, 68(20C) is a pleasant day, 32(0C) is just hitting the freezing point of water. Interestingly the scales converge at -40.
Nah, I don’t have anything like that against US. But out in the rest of the world it just makes sense to use standard units. Live the way you live in the US, but when you come elsewhere, including the parts of Internet not meant for US inhabitants only, do in Rome as Romans do.
The US doesn’t only make up only 5% of Lemmy though. I can’t find data, but it feels like 40% or more. I don’t complain when German people post in German. No need to complain when people from the US post using Fahrenheit.
I disagree with the person you are responding too (I don’t think it’s impolite to use F), but to be fair C to F is “double and add 32” (technically 9/5+32), which is very easy to compute, while the reverse is -32 and then /2, which is generally harder (I think most people find subtractions harder).
I know the formula but rather than calculate 9/5 or 5/9 I just do a quick search, for example “-20f to c” and have the answer in three seconds.
It’s about 40° C
Yeah, at that temp, just standing outside will make you sweat.
Not my experience. I spent some 4 months at Goa in India, and it was usually around 40°C. I rented a bicycle there and rode it for distances of over 100 km in a day. And I did not sweat.
That temperature should not be a problem for a person living in an area where that’s a common temperature. And if it’s not a common temperature, then it’s not common, and it’s not really a problem to have to pay the taxi if you need to go to an important meeting precisely on the one scorching hot day :)
I was assuming from the context that it would translate to more like 50°C or so.
100km a day at 40C and you didn’t sweat at all? That’s some interesting fiction.
It might be that’s because I went to India by hitchhiking, and did that through South-East Asia, and that took quite a bit of time 🙂 My body had plenty of time to incrementally adjust to the climate as I was making my way southwards. I’m guessing that you mostly spend your time in spaces with AC and your body never gets acclimated to the 40°C temperatures? Or maybe those temperatures take place so seldom where you live that you’ve has no chance to adapt? I’m not really used to AC, so I keep it off if possible even where it’s available.
Anyways, if you look at videos of everyday life of locals in Goa, they aren’t really constantly dripping sweat. At least I don’t have any memory of having sweated very much during my time in Laos, Thailand, Burma and India. Even if there was some level of constant sweating, it absolutely hasn’t been enough to disturbing in smell or visually, because otherwise I’d have a memory of it.