The Anglo-Dutch wars. William of Orange landed troops in London in 1688 and took the throne with Mary II. It's more complicated than that, but it was a whole Thing. Charles II died, leaving James II in charge, but Catholicism was on the way out, and conveniently, William of Orange, a Protestant, was married to Mary II.
The undercurrent of anti-Dutch sentiment started back then still has remnants in the language. See "going Dutch" "Dutch courage" "Dutch treat" "Dutch uncle". :)
Speaking from a university perspective - we've been scaling back our computer labs a fair bit, as there's a lot of people with personal laptops and tablets now. Almost half our former workstations are now eliminated or BYOD.
That is a weird argument. TBH there are only like six ACTUAL temperatures: fucking hot, hot, warm, cool, cold, fuckin' cold. Everything else is paperwork and doesn't really inform your day to day. The difference between say 30 and 29C is maybe undoing a button on your shirt.
One quibble - it fully ignores humidity, as does C. The subjective feel of a climate doesn't depend only on temperature. 50% humidity at 10C is very different from 50% at 40C.
Subjectively? I only really think there are like six temperatures. Fucking hot, hot, warm, cool, cold, fucking cold. My clothing choices change at each stage of that scale.
Just because F encapsulates that in a positive integer 1-100 scale doesn't really make it appeal to me. C feels much more natural, more human, because you're not dealing with ludicrously small increments that don't matter for day to day use, and the 0-30 captures almost all temperatures you're going to actually see day to day.
It irks me that people are trying to turn their personal prejudices and habits into like, objective universal laws.
There are very few places that experience -17C and 40C for that to be really useful. And I don't get it at all. 0 is cold, 30 is hot. Not a difficult concept.
Yes. I'm glad you understand my argument. And can you distinguish the difference between launching Earth-monitoring satellites, communication satellites, exploration satellites, and penis rockets for billionaires?
The Anglo-Dutch wars. William of Orange landed troops in London in 1688 and took the throne with Mary II. It's more complicated than that, but it was a whole Thing. Charles II died, leaving James II in charge, but Catholicism was on the way out, and conveniently, William of Orange, a Protestant, was married to Mary II.
The undercurrent of anti-Dutch sentiment started back then still has remnants in the language. See "going Dutch" "Dutch courage" "Dutch treat" "Dutch uncle". :)
I'm mostly teasing. It's more funny than serious.