Kayos
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Hasn't some prime minister just proposed the return of the imperial system ?
For nostalgic reasons, allegedly
Can't post my feelings on the matter or this thread will be locked
Hasn't some prime minister just proposed the return of the imperial system ?
Yeah but that's because he's an idiot and thinks it will get him votesHasn't some prime minister just proposed the return of the imperial system ?
No they're not. 1 metre is exactly the distance light travels in 1/299792458 of a second in a vacuum, a second is exactly 9192631770 of something to do with caesium, the Planck constant is defined as 6.62607015*10^−34 which can be combined with the previous two values to give an exact mass of a kilogram. All the SI base units are defined like this, they're exact, rational quantities of discrete things.They are all irrational numbers.
I went to the builders merchants today for some plumbing fittings, they were all imperial!
But they bear no resemblance to to imperial sizes. A half inch fitting is much bigger than half an inch

No they're not. 1 metre is exactly the distance light travels in 1/299792458 of a second in a vacuum, a second is exactly 9192631770 of something to do with caesium, the Planck constant is defined as 6.62607015*10^−34 which can be combined with the previous two values to give an exact mass of a kilogram. All the SI base units are defined like this, they're exact, rational quantities of discrete things.
Of course any measurement you make of a continuous thing has an associated error or tolerance.
Since you were clearly hoping for a bit of pedantry, a word isn't necessarily 16 bits. A word is the natural unit of data for a particular microprocessor. On a 16-bit micro, a word is 16 bits but on a 32 bit one it's 32 bits.And two, it occurred to me I made a mistake, not that anyone seemed to notice so I'll say it was a deliberate test, and everyone failed.
4 bits is a nibble, a word is 2 bytes, 16 bits.![]()
My 16bit 90s sampler shows ram amount on startup in mwordsSince you were clearly hoping for a bit of pedantry, a word isn't necessarily 16 bits. A word is the natural unit of data for a particular microprocessor. On a 16-bit micro, a word is 16 bits but on a 32 bit one it's 32 bits.
Word (computer architecture) - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Don’t 5 characters equal one word? Space bar included?
60wpm (with few errors) was regarded as a good typist speed back when it was important? That was before errors were easily corrected with a spell-checker and auto-correct.
What do you regard as “metrication”?


Marathon became Snickers…Inches became centimetres.
Pints became litres.
Pounds became kilos.
Wpm became hexadecimal.![]()
.... that is one of the hardest to deal withMarathon became Snickers…

Opal fruits mate..... that is one of the hardest to deal with![]()
Still not got over itThought the metre was based on the circumference of the Earth, which they unfortunately miscalculated. The metric system was devised to move away from the royal hoof, thumbs, arm span etc...No they're not. 1 metre is exactly the distance light travels in 1/299792458 of a second in a vacuum, a second is exactly 9192631770 of something to do with caesium, the Planck constant is defined as 6.62607015*10^−34 which can be combined with the previous two values to give an exact mass of a kilogram. All the SI base units are defined like this, they're exact, rational quantities of discrete things.
Of course any measurement you make of a continuous thing has an associated error or tolerance.
That's known as a double word, which is what I was always used to.Since you were clearly hoping for a bit of pedantry, a word isn't necessarily 16 bits. A word is the natural unit of data for a particular microprocessor. On a 16-bit micro, a word is 16 bits but on a 32 bit one it's 32 bits.
Word (computer architecture) - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Q=AK sqr(2gh/rho) Drummed into me at tech'. K is critical for gases. Ideal or otherwise.Being a man of a certain age, we just had imperial units when I was at primary school, the metric came along and I'm reasonable happy with imperial or metric.
However, I seem to recall at some point in my life trying to work out some calculations for getting fluid flow through an orifice. Trying to do it with imperial units was really hard (all kinds of conversion factors needed), whereas doing it in metric was far easier. That was the point at which I decided imperial was OK for the allotment, but metric was needed at work.
For those of you who want Boris to bring back imperial, I hope that you do know, he also seriously believes that teaching Latin should be brought back in to schools - true!




