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2 yr. ago

  • Between the two, I think temperature is the harder one. But strangely, it also brings weight and volume back into it: Cookbooks.

    So many recipes are finely tuned balances of measurements that just look plain alien when converted to metric.

  • When you ask someone "what day is it today?", they usually have a handle on what month it is and just need the day.

    You're still allowed to exclude implied information, no matter which method of dating you want to go with. You can just say "the 15th".

    For making plans, it's only if you make them way in advance that you need the month first, which would be sorting and scheduling, not daily use.

    I can't speak for you, but for me I am making plans, sorting, and scheduling every single day.

  • https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimal_time

    This term is often used specifically to refer to the French Republican calendar time system used in France from 1794 to 1800, during the French Revolution, which divided the day into 10 decimal hours, each decimal hour into 100 decimal minutes and each decimal minute into 100 decimal seconds

  • Hard disagree.

    Least specific -> most specific is generally better in spoken language as the first part spoken is the part the listener begins interpreting.

    Like if I ask if you're free on "the 15th of March" vs "March 15", the first example is slightly jarring for your brain to interpret because at first it hears "15th" and starts processing all the 15ths it's aware of, then "March" to finally clarify which month the 15th is referencing.

    The only thing practical about DD.MM.YY is that it is easier for the speaker because they can drop the implied information, or continue to add it as they develop the sentence.

    "Are you free on the 15th" [oh shit, that's probably confusing, I meant a few months from now] "of July" [oh shit, I actually mean next summer not this one] "next year (or 2025)".

    So the format is really a question of who is more important in spoken language: the speaker or the listener? And I firmly believe the listener is more important, because the entire point of communication is to take the idea you've formulated into your head, and accurately describe that idea in a way that recreates that same idea in the listener's head. Making it easier for the speaker to make a sentence is pointless if the sentence itself is confusing to the listener. That's literally a failure to communicate.

  • I think this was the first version of that I heard:

    My horse broke his leg. I called the vet and he said "Not much I can do. You're gonna have to shoot 'em."

    I don't know why.

    But if he don't start getting better soon I'ma have to shoot 'em again.

  • That still doesn't make sense. All this does is enable the PS VR headset to be used with a PC to play steam games. It gives people that already own a PS VR another option for usage: plugging it into a PC and playing VR games they purchased through steam. It lowers the barrier to entry for the user to experience PC VR games by being able to use hardware they already have on hand instead of having to purchase an Oculus or Index. Valve still gets their software sales cut because you can only use the PS VR to play games in your steam library on PC.

  • Currently supported feature sets on Linux cover 90% of the general computer using population's requirements. Linux has shortcomings on features that most people don't even have access to based on their existing hardware.