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Tuesday, 01 September 2009 06:56 |
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Posted September 1, 2009
Now, the rest of the world insists that the metric system is far superior to our English system of miles and inches, ounces, feet and pounds. I certainly think that a gallon is a gallon and there shouldn’t be an Imperial gallon that is just a little bit bigger. I am sure they are right, of course. But why then don’t they advocate for Metric dates and times? Why not go to a day divided into quarters, and each quarter into 100 segments? Each 6 hour period would be a quarter of the day or ChronoQuartometer (or some such), and each quarter day would be divided into 100 periods we might call ChronoCentometers. So when 25% of the day has passed, at 6 am on August 26th, we might designate as Aug 26.25, and midday, which we might still call noon, would be Aug 26.5. And so on. Make sense? Pass it on. Lets get this done, and move on to the next thing. But why do we all naturally divide pies and cakes in halves, quarters, sixths and eighths, rather than in 10ths? Personally, I love the British measures of foot, derived from the length of a foot, a stone (approx 16lb) as a measure of weight and of obvious derivation, and a hand (about 7”) as a measure of height in things such as horses. It ties us to our medieval roots where scales and rules were hard to come by, and our own anatomy and the natural world around us were used as measuring instruments.
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Bruce Lund, Founder
Lund and Company Invention, L.L.C.
Blog Archive
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As for the time measurement, I guess we are just so used to hours now, which I totally agree make no sense at all. Isn't there a swatch internet time? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swatch_Internet_Time
About weight, I really don't care what it is derived from, as long as I can easily convert it into bigger or smaller increments without crazy increments.
You didn't mention Temperature though. Again, I grew up with Celsius. As a human being I can very easily grasp Celsius. At 0 C water freezes, which also means my blood would freeze if I did nothing against it. At 100 Water gassifies, which means my skin would do so also :-)
The whole gallon being different in Canada and the US really bothers me. I drive a smart car [url]http://tr.im/xDH1 and the car mileage is 60+mpg, with the gallon being 3.8 litres (or whatever the US gallon is). Using the Canadian gallon it's more like 70+mpg, but hold on, why are you asking about mpg here? Shouldn't it be kmpg (kilometers per gallon), and then which gallon do you refer to if you are asking about an American length measurement? ... Rrriiight, it consumes 3.5 liters / 100 km. Now we are getting somewhere. :-)
Cheers, Hans