The Grood said:Megabytes, Megahertz etc...
Has there ever been an equivalent imperial measurement?
atszyman said:I would argue that Megahertz is imperial.
Ouch!! That MegahertzBlue Velvet said:Only when measuring certain parts of the anatomy judging by some comments around here.
atszyman said:I would argue that Megahertz is imperial.
Metric to me is all base ten so 60 seconds in a minute, 60 minutes in an hour and 24 hours in a day would seem more imperial. Swatch beats, on the other hand, I would consider metric....
I know that the SI unit of time is the second, but the whole non-base 10 doesn't seem metric to me....at that rate neither do bytes... 8-bits to a byte... that seems more imperial as well...
Trust me, it gets much worse when you have some people working in mils (milliinches) and others in millimeters. (40 mil is about 1 mm.) But the names are so similar that confusion is sure to arise.mduser63 said:But if you ask any of the other people in the shop, they'll say that metric confuses them and only imperial makes sense. Huh!?!?
Actually the biggest non-base 10 "problem" with imperial measurements is their reliance on fractions which are more base 2 than base 10. Going back to mduser63's examples.cait-sith said:The numbers are still in base 10.
mduser63 said:Computer specification are in base 2 because digital logic is all based around base 2 math. This is very fundamental, logical and for good reason. It has nothing to do with metric vs. imperial.
Anyway, I wish imperial would just go away. I can't figure out why the US insists on hanging on to it. I work in a machine shop, and to me a 9/32" socket wrench simply isn't more intuitive than a 7 mm wrench. Afterall, it's much easier to figure out that 6 mm is a little less than 7 mm, but if you ask me the relationship between 5/16" and 9/32" I'm going to have to sit and think for a minute to figure it out. But if you ask any of the other people in the shop, they'll say that metric confuses them and only imperial makes sense. Huh!?!?
Timepass said:<snip> the US poplulation is not going to switch very fast. The poplulation knows Imperial. Everything we use is that way and as a whole we not as fimilure with metrec. <snip>
But seconds is the base unit, so a hertz which is per second is both imperial and metric. An example of a hertz-like unit that I would consider imperial is rpm.atszyman said:I would argue that Megahertz is imperial.
Metric to me is all base ten so 60 seconds in a minute, 60 minutes in an hour and 24 hours in a day would seem more imperial. Swatch beats, on the other hand, I would consider metric....
I know that the SI unit of time is the second, but the whole non-base 10 doesn't seem metric to me....at that rate neither do bytes... 8-bits to a byte... that seems more imperial as well...
gekko513 said:Is km/h a proper metric unit? I'm guessing not.
dubbz said:If I'm not mistaken, the "correct" way is to use meters per second, ie. mp/s. But I pretty much only see that if there's scientists involved.
IJ Reilly said:I want my microprocessor speeds measured in furlongs per fortnight, and I'll wager that I'm not the only one.
True, anything more than 10" = megahurts.Blue Velvet said:Only when measuring certain parts of the anatomy judging by some comments around here.
Tom B. said:Do you think we will ever switch to a metric clock, as in 100 seconds per minute, 100 minutes per hour and 10 (or 20?) hours a day?
Blue Velvet said:Only when measuring certain parts of the anatomy judging by some comments around here.
mpw said:True, anything more than 10" = megahurts.