Originally Posted By: Shannow
Originally Posted By: spackard
Hold out a piece of string.
Divide it by 2. Easy, right?
Divide it by 4. Good.
Divide it by 10. This is left as an exercise for the reader.
OK, while we are at it, divide it by 12...is that a comparable level of difficulty to 10 ?
What about thousandths ?
Yards ? they are 3s
5280 feet in a mile ??? what sort of folding exercise gets you that ???
Is the distance an ox could plough in one day really relevant these days ?
Standard is what makes people say "torque equals horsepower at 5252 RPM"
Painful to fold, but trivial to multiply--start with a base of an inch, and then it's nothing to go up from there.
Both systems though have the same dividing issue--eventually one divides by ten, hundred, thousand so as to measure really small things.
I still say highway marker signs should have been done in km, and the exit signs too. Most people don't notice them and wouldn't care--they are just numbers--and those who can appreciate them would either learn the conversion factor, or perhaps even just learn to think in those units.
But as a taxpayer I would be very against redoing the signs today! Just on new signs going up.
Originally Posted By: spackard
Hold out a piece of string.
Divide it by 2. Easy, right?
Divide it by 4. Good.
Divide it by 10. This is left as an exercise for the reader.
OK, while we are at it, divide it by 12...is that a comparable level of difficulty to 10 ?
What about thousandths ?
Yards ? they are 3s
5280 feet in a mile ??? what sort of folding exercise gets you that ???
Is the distance an ox could plough in one day really relevant these days ?
Standard is what makes people say "torque equals horsepower at 5252 RPM"
Painful to fold, but trivial to multiply--start with a base of an inch, and then it's nothing to go up from there.
Both systems though have the same dividing issue--eventually one divides by ten, hundred, thousand so as to measure really small things.
I still say highway marker signs should have been done in km, and the exit signs too. Most people don't notice them and wouldn't care--they are just numbers--and those who can appreciate them would either learn the conversion factor, or perhaps even just learn to think in those units.
But as a taxpayer I would be very against redoing the signs today! Just on new signs going up.