364
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
this post was submitted on 30 Mar 2024
364 points (94.6% liked)
Technology
59197 readers
953 users here now
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Our Rules
- Follow the lemmy.world rules.
- Only tech related content.
- Be excellent to each another!
- Mod approved content bots can post up to 10 articles per day.
- Threads asking for personal tech support may be deleted.
- Politics threads may be removed.
- No memes allowed as posts, OK to post as comments.
- Only approved bots from the list below, to ask if your bot can be added please contact us.
- Check for duplicates before posting, duplicates may be removed
Approved Bots
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
4000 acre?
Americans inventing new freedom units instead of using squared meters...
Before the enactment of the metric system, many countries in Europe used their own official acres. In France, the traditional unit of area was the arpent carré, a measure based on the Roman system of land measurement. The acre was used only in Normandy (and neighbouring places outside its traditional borders), but its value varied greatly across Normandy, ranging from 3,632 to 9,725 square metres, with 8,172 square metres being the most frequent value.[clarification needed] But inside the same pays of Normandy, for instance in pays de Caux, the farmers (still in the 20th century) made the difference between the grande acre (68 ares, 66 centiares) and the petite acre (56 to 65 ca).[50] The Normandy acre was usually divided in 4 vergées (roods) and 160 square perches, like the English acre.
*Europeans invented the acre 1000 yeats ago
Yes... long before...
So backwards...
If by "Americans inventing" you mean "Europeans inventing" then yes
Non English Europeans aren't savages who use non metric units. 🧐 Smh
If "European countries" excludes most European countries then yes European countries didn't use acres.
Bitch it was the romans who "invented" most of the units.
And unless I see y'all adopting metric time in the near future I frankly don't want to hear about how oh so stupid anyone who isn't doing metric is.
Plus there's just the idiocy of it being base 10 when base 36 is so much better, uses the whole keyspace of numerals and latin alphabet letters, "10" is a perfect square that's the product of two other perfect squares, plus "10" has 9 factors, it has a number of factors equal to one of the perfect squares that it factors into!
Huh I didn't realise there were people who might actually prefer imperial. I thought it was just sort of grandfathered in for many people. To me metric just makes more intuitive sense. But I'll use both.
Metric time I don't care for and I don't think anyone is seriously using.
Wait a hectosecond.
It's good when the people of eternal Rome use the old measurements, for they were the citizens of the coolest empire of our time.
It's not good when the americant's use it to measure screaming eagles per burger or something. 🧐
Something something metric units something 🧐
I'll convert it to a metric unit for you so it's easier to visualize: the solar farm is 2*10^27 square Angstroms.
Hope that helps!
Thanks, It actually does, because the conversation factor is easy.
2e27 Å2 = 2e7 m2 = 20 km2
So an area 5km by 4km. You can now easily compare it to the size of your neighborhood, town or city.
Finally, a unit i can get behind
How many Texas' is that?
Texas's?
Texi?
That is actually helpful. It's easy to convert from Angstroms (10^-10 m) to meters, to kilometers (10^3 m). That means it's all just basic arithmetic. 27 - 2*(10 + 3) = 27 - 26 = 1. So, it's 2*10^1 square km, or 20 square km.
at least it doesnt fall prey to the ambiguity provided by using square meters or m^2.
Oh, oh no. Thinking isn't your strong suit is it?
one hectare contains about 2.47 acres