• dedale@kbin.social
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      2 years ago

      Change is hard. In Europe we wanted to drop daylight saving time, but nobody could agree on which hour to keep. So it’s here to stay. Sigh.

      • illi@kbin.social
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        2 years ago

        nobody could agree on which hour to keep. So it’s here to stay

        Is it really? I thought it was just postponed. Or do you say it juat because it seems to be always postponing

        • dedale@kbin.social
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          2 years ago

          Maybe I’m too pessimistic.
          The parliament voted to abolish them in 2019, but instead of agreeing on a specific time, or discussing it at the council level, they polled each country individually. We got incoherent results, obviously, and I don’t think any progress has been made since then.
          Admittedly they had bigger fish to fry, so maybe once the covid and the war are over, it’ll get sorted out.

        • AtomicPurple@kbin.social
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          2 years ago

          Actually no. This year was the last spring forward, at least for the US. We’re not falling back to standard time this year and never will again.

          • Kichae@kbin.social
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            2 years ago

            Leave it to the US to, in the choice between a “standard” thing and an off-standard thing to choose the off-standard option.

    • sibachian@kbin.social
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      2 years ago

      they didn’t really try. it’s more of a suggestion (and still is). metric is standard in the US within science, just not among regular folks because commercially it’s not as dramatic, i.e. news stations dramatize 100F!!! since it sounds way more dramatic than 38°C. if the news and commercial products started using metric, people would quickly switch over.

      unfortunately a lot of imperial shit has started migrating to europe due to chinese products being produced for the US market and then sold in europe as an afterthought using imperial units.

      • verysoft@kbin.social
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        2 years ago

        You already got me dying mentioning 38c. Its just a case of what you’ve grown up with. USA should defo swap, but they would have to display both for a long time for people to understand. If the weather and such started showing both and mentioning temps in both, then yeah it would probably take off.

          • VanillaGorilla@kbin.social
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            2 years ago

            I remember buying TVs in centimeters. It was a thing. Monitors have been imperial as long as I can remember, but TVs were metric. They only switched when they got bigger for whatever reason.

      • Fu@theres.life
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        2 years ago

        @sibachian and that’s better. You can easily tell, 100 is too hot to play outside, and 0 is too cold to play outside and everything else is fine.

    • sailsperson@kbin.social
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      2 years ago

      De-juro, US already uses metric - there’s samples and document and stuff like that, just like in other countries. This makes it even more peculiar, because it’s just the people that aren’t willing to drop some old system that they brought from the colonial British Empire with them back in the day; you’d think it only makes sense, with all the freedom and independence tendencies, but somehow the archaic measuring system from the monarch is still vigorously beloved and defended by millions… even though they’ve declared independence from the monarch a couple of centuries ago.

      We live in a weird world.