• Fonzie!
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    311 months ago

    TBF in practice a lot of countries use the imperial system, from Canada to the UK to Jamaica to the Philippines. They just “use metric” on paper.

    Also, here in the Netherlands we use inches for screen sizes and cups for some cooking recipes. I will insist that my monitor is 55cm and even tech people ask me how much that is with full sincerity.

      • Fonzie!
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        311 months ago

        I noticed some Canadians seem to use metric exclusively, while others very much use imperial systems through and through. Android defaults to imperial systems when it’s set to Canadian English, which confuses me even more but I suppose imperial must be used a lot, then

        • Catweazle
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          fedilink
          211 months ago

          @lord_ryvan @BonesOfTheMoon, I don’t understand how it can be in the 21st century that a system as idiotic and archaic as the imperial one continues to be used. NASA has already caused millions of dollars in damage by crashing several probes due to miscalculations with these outdated and devoid of any logic measurements, based on parts of the body of a king, dead centuries ago instead of clear physical and mathematical units as in the rest of the world.

          • Fonzie!
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            111 months ago

            I also don’t get it and my country is slowly adapting it too (Netherlands)

            I absolutely hate it and try to counter it actively

        • @BonesOfTheMoon@lemmy.world
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          fedilink
          111 months ago

          I find stuff like cups and spoons and pounds and inches are used here more than metric, but we definitely use kilometers only.

          • Fonzie!
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            111 months ago

            Android lied to me

            Maybe it’s a plot by the Australian government because it led me to set all my devices to Australian English; they’re always 100% metric