Kolanaki, (edited )
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

50f is pretty comfy unless you hate long sleeves or are super sensitive to it being slightly cold.

lanolinoil,
@lanolinoil@lemmy.world avatar

Shivers in Texan

Feathercrown,

Interestingly if you take the middle of the freezing point (32F) and 100F, you do get a mildly warm 71. No this does not prove anything, yes I’ll still say it.

Then if you average THAT with 50, you get 60.5… and you see all three numbers make a triangle. Illuminati confirmed.

Sanyanov, (edited )

Then you map it onto Celsius and see 32°F is 0°C, 71°F is 21,7°C and 100°F is 37,8°C.

Which coincides almost perfectly with the 0-20-40 framework we intuitively use in Celsius. 0 is deadly cold without warm clothes, 20 is warm, and 40 is deadly hot.

Turns out Celsius is good for weather, too. or it’s illuminati

Metans,

What happens when you add Kurt Angle into the mix?

snw,

that’s when you get a 133% chance of rain

ThatWeirdGuy1001,
@ThatWeirdGuy1001@lemmy.world avatar

Fahrenheit is based on how the human body tells temperature and I’ll die on that hill.

Celsius is for water and Kelvin is for molecules.

Using Celsius or Kelvin for scientific measurement makes sense.

Using fahrenheit for the average person just checking the atmospheric temperature makes sense.

You can use different scales for different things ¯⁠\⁠⁠(⁠ツ⁠)⁠⁠/⁠¯

Floshie,

I’m the kind of person that hates it when the water’s too hot while taking a shower. Friends that I am living with take their shower way hotter to a point that I cannot resist the temperature

How the fuck do you base your own temperature system on something so subjective ???

Sanyanov, (edited )

No it’s not.

What makes 0°F (-17,7°C) special for a human body? Is it the limit after which we don’t feel any colder? No.

And what makes 100°F (37,7°C) special? Maybe we can’t feel any hotter? No, we can. Is it the body temperature? No. What is it?

Maybe 50°F (10°C) is perfect? Nah, cold!

If we change 0°F to, say, 0°C and 100°F to 40°C, does it change the notion that 0°F is very cold for a human body and that 100°F is very hot? No, and as a bonus you get 50°F equaling that perfect 20°C.

Fahrenheit scale is super arbitrary and it’s hilarious when it is posed as a “human-centric” scale. At the same time, the concept of Fahrenheit scale is unnecessarily complicated and the notion between Celsius is extremely clear - you can easily calibrate Celsius thermometer with nothing but kettle and freezer, right at home, right now.

Also,

  • Sub-zero Celsius = very cold, snow doesn’t melt, ice doesn’t melt
  • 0 Celsius = cold, ice gets slippery
  • 10 Celsius = jacket weather
  • 20 Celsius = comfy
  • 30 Celsius = hot
  • 40 Celsius = scorching
  • Above 40 Celsius = deadly, leave the area ASAP (short exposures like sauna don’t count). Also, fans stop cooling you down and now heat you up instead.

Simple enough.

zalgotext,

Fahrenheit scale is super arbitrary and it’s hilarious when it is posed as a “human-centric” scale.

The Fahrenheit scale is literally based on what was thought to be the limits of human comfort though. 0° F started as the lowest measured temperature in Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit’s hometown, and 100° F was his estimate of normal human body temperature.

You think it’s arbitrary because you’re used to a different scale. To me, having a scale go from 0C to 40C seems arbitrary, especially because I live in an area where for 3 months out of the year, it’s constantly below 0C, and it’s critical to know the difference between -5C and -15C, rather than just lumping them both into the same “sub-zero” category. I’m the same vein, categorizing 10C as “jacket weather” is borderline useless. The “jacket” I’m going to wear at 10C is much heavier than the one I’m going to wear at 17C (if I wear one at all), for example.

By the way, you can do the exact same breakdown of the Fahrenheit scale, except it’s more than twice as granular, and it goes from 0 to 100, like a bunch of other metric measurements… It boggles my mind when metric users use the 0 to 40 Celsius scale up as an argument against Fahrenheit.

buzziepeen,

You just described the difference between -5C and -15C without any difficulty at all. The rest of the world uses Celsius. There’s zero actual tangible benefit to using fahrenheit. The US doesn’t have any economic, social, political, technological, artistic, or theological advantage because they use fahrenheit.

It’s what you’re used to. That’s it. That’s the only reason you would like it. It’s fine to say that. “It would be a pain in the arse for a few years adjusting the nation to using Celsius” is fine as your reasoning for liking it.

The UK finally fully switched from imperial weights/volumes for goods to metric in '95. Some people kicked up a fuss for a while about it, but a recent poll showed that 98% of people don’t want to bring imperial back.

All the arguments that dragged on for years about how difficult and confusing it would be to use unfamiliar units were worthless drivel. Buying a 450g package of mince instead of a 1lbs package of mince is something you get used to insanely quickly unless you’re a moron. If the US decided to switch to Celsius you’d have a bunch of people kicking off, but life would go on and after a while no one would want to switch back anymore.

zalgotext,

You just described the difference between -5C and -15C without any difficulty at all.

After converting to Fahrenheit lol.

It’s what you’re used to.

That’s kind of my whole point. It’s what I’m used to, and you listing out the Celsius scale breakdown isn’t going to convince me to want to use Celsius for everyday uses. Of course I could get used to it, but it would take a wholesale, nationwide switch, just like it took the UK. Until then, telling me how much better Celsius is is just pissing into the wind, and honestly, a little underinformed.

buzziepeen,

I haven’t listed any scales. That was someone else. I just chipped in to point out that arguing about scales or which one is better is pointless. You like what you’re used to, which as I said I’d fine, it’s just dumb to be passionate about something that’s arbitrary. The only reason other people are trying to convince you that Celsius is fine it’s because it’s pointless for humanity as a whole to have different measurement units in different countries.

At some point the people living in the middle of the North American continent will have to switch, it might be 1000 years from now but the standardisation will come eventually. There will be loads of people like you complaining, but then once the switch happens it’ll be absolutely fine and nothing of value will be lost. All the arguing that will happen between then and now about which system is better will have been pointless.

Sanyanov, (edited )

Seconding this.

The reason we even care is that maintaining two systems is heavily impractical and adds to confusion all around the world - simply because 4% of world’s population can’t bother to make a change.

We wouldn’t care what you use - perfect barbecue temperature scale, length unit of football field, weights in blue whales - if it wouldn’t affect the rest 96% of the world who have to decipher your blubber.

Everyone uses Celsius and metric, make a damn switch, it’s not that hard and you won’t lose anything. You only use it because you’ve used to it, there is literally nothing else to it. Everyone switched, everyone’s happy with it. Do it already.

P.S. Also, Fahrenheit is currently officially defined through Celsius, as a scale that is at 32 degrees on melting point of water (0°C), and 212 degrees on its boiling point (100°C).

Let it sink in.

Fahrenheit is modernly defined through Celsius.

Sanyanov, (edited )

Fahrenheit’s hometown is certainly the metric everyone should use /s

Celsius is not arbitrary, it is based on objective physical reality, and the only arbitrary thing about it is atmospheric pressure, which is more or less equal on the sea level. The rest is us finding convenient patterns, not the other way around. 0-40 is not a scale, it’s an arbitrary range and adaptation of Celsius to subjective feelings of hot and cold - one that you ironically need for Fahrenheit, too. Actual thermometers normally go -50°C to +50°C.

On sub-zero, it is the same idea: -5°C is a weather for a light winter jacket, -15°C is a weather for a heavy winter jacket, -25°C is for heavy jacket and some pullover, etc etc.

The 0-40 argument demonstrates that we don’t need some arbitrary scale based on Fahrenheit’s recording in his hometown in order to conveniently estimate temperature. The groups for each dozen of degrees are just for easy reference. 17 degrees is optional for your taste, to me it’s light jacket weather in overcast or t-shirt weather when sunny. There are no perfect temperatures for anything and anyone, and it just doesn’t make sense to get into more detail.

As per granularity, people invented decimals, but normally it’s simply not necessary to tell the difference between 17°C and 18°C, let alone between 63°F and 64°F. There are so many factors influencing the temperature feeling, and one degree ain’t one.

kerrigan778,

Honestly people who insist on using Celsius for their daily lives rather than just for science have way more comfort than me having to deal with fractions of a degree on a regular basis. But I guess that’s the point of metric, dealing with precise decimels constantly rather than just having a unit conveniently sized for the thing you’re doing.

itslilith,
@itslilith@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

No one cares about fractions of Celsius, in my experience

ExLisper,

Sick people do.

baggins,

Me when my house is 20.462c instead of 20.463c: 😡🤬🥶

Sanyanov,

Does anyone feel the difference of 1°C?

Dick_Justice,
@Dick_Justice@lemmy.world avatar

Hell yeah, 50 degrees is tee shirt and shorts weather IMHO.

mmagod,

after i moved from the southwest to the pacific northwest and got baptized by the snow for nearly half the year… i very much agree

hark,
@hark@lemmy.world avatar

If you score 100 on a test then that’s a perfect, therefore 100 is the perfect temperature.

VinnieFarsheds,
@VinnieFarsheds@lemmy.world avatar

💯

FlyingSquid,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

And if you score 51 you pass, so 51 is the passing temperature.

SirStreq,

51 would not be a passing grade in most of the US

KrankyKong,

Im confused as to where 51 would be a passing grade anywhere.

fallingcats,

Places where they make the tests harder

KrankyKong,

Wouldn’t lowering the goal post make the test easier to pass?

fallingcats,

Not if the questions simultaneously increase in difficulty

OceanSoap,

In Phoenix, can confirm, 100°F dry heat is pretty awesome

thorbot,

50 degree Fahrenheit is perfect. Fahrenheit is still retarded though

OrteilGenou,

Pretty sure Fahrenheit is dead

thorbot,

Not in the US

OrteilGenou,

Hate to break it to you, but he died in 1736

Firipu,
@Firipu@startrek.website avatar

Same for c, but at half the scale tbh. (with a bit of a stretch to the imagination)

50 is very hot. 0 is cold. 25c is perfect.

Demdaru,

Hello, you, who walks the fiery path. I much prefer my 18, thanks.

M0oP0o,
@M0oP0o@mander.xyz avatar

Move to Saskatchewan if you want hell both ways, summers in the 40s and winters in the -50s. YAY

STRIKINGdebate2,
@STRIKINGdebate2@lemmy.world avatar

25c is literally cock and ball torture what are ya on about. Then again I’m an Irish guy who hasn’t left my country in nearly a decade so I don’t even know what more than 25c feels like

owatnext,

25°C is 77°F; context for any Americans here.

doggle,

I love how half this thread is solely comments making unit conversions.

Also 77°F/25°C is pretty mild. A crisp mid-spring day. -American Southerner

owatnext,

Yeah 25°C is nothing. A bit on the cool side tbh.

pipows, (edited )
@pipows@lemmy.today avatar

I’m Brazilian and, although I’m not in the hottest area, summer easily hits 40°C, so yeah, 25°C is not perfect, that would be 20°C, but is pretty good still

can,

I’m Canadian and I agree. 25 c is the edge of what’s bearable but closer to 20 c is better.

foo,

It was 30c at midnight here last night

JustARegularNerd,

Same here in QLD, Australia

zik,

As an Australian enjoying summer right now I honestly think it’s a bit chilly on days we don’t get to 25C.

Pyroglyph,
@Pyroglyph@lemmy.world avatar

25C is the point where I start feeling sleepy because it’s so warm.

If you think 25C is optimal then I’m curious as to what your “comfy sleeping temperature” is?

Firipu,
@Firipu@startrek.website avatar

Tbh, in summer I sleep with the airco on 27c. Where I live summer gets a nice and toasty 30c+ 24/7 @ 80%+ humidity. 25c feels amazing compared to that.

Before I moved here, I’d also have said 20c was ideal though :)

aulin,

15-20 °C is ideal for me. Above 22-23 it starts being too warm. Below 10 I have to start wearing a sweater, which I dislike.

sharkfucker420,
@sharkfucker420@lemmy.ml avatar

50 is pretty nice what are you on about

Theharpyeagle,

I don’t touch a jacket until 40, 50 is perfect.

JDubbleu,

That’s peak hoodie and jeans weather. Literally perfect.

Telodzrum,

Yeah, I’m not going to the beach at 50F, but I can hike, golf, just hang out outdoors, etc. If it’s sunny 50F can even feel rather warm.

xpinchx,

Perfect running weather.

doggle,

There are many people (particularly in northern regions) who would consider 50° to be quite mild/pleasant

jasondj,

New Englander born and raised. Thats hoodie and shorts weather. Best time of the year.

CaptPretentious,

Minnesota checking in. This is exactly correct. Great time for sitting around a fire.

Infynis,
@Infynis@midwest.social avatar

I’d say 50 is perfect

bmsok, (edited )

I agree in Midwestern as I put on my shorts and tshirt (I’m not fat, BTW… you just sort of get used to those balmy 50° days)

dingus, (edited )

As a former Midwesterner (grew up there and lived there for 26 years), I never got used to the cold so I eventually moved South.

But turns out now I get cold at anything below 70F lol.

Ghostalmedia,
@Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world avatar

This guy fats

DragonTypeWyvern,

I diagnose you with “weak, non-Finnish blood.”

MindSkipperBro12,

Put a coat on, loser

DharmaCurious,
@DharmaCurious@startrek.website avatar

Between 50 and 63 I’m in heaven. Anything higher than that and all i want to do is go swimming, which as an adult with responsibilities, i never get to. Anything lower than that, and i have to wear more clothes and look fatter than i am.

emeralddawn45,

What the fuck, aren’t most buildings kept at 72? How do you exist anywhere except in a walk in fridge?

DharmaCurious,
@DharmaCurious@startrek.website avatar

I never said i got these temperatures. I just said I’m uncomfortable otherwise.

doggle,

Depends entirely on where you live. Surprising what people will accept as normal when their gas/electric bill is on the line.

aulin,

64-68 °F is fairly standard here. No more than 68. (18-20 °C)

SpaceNoodle,

Found the Canadian

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

Exactly! 👍

themeatbridge,

Why would 50 be perfect? 50 is fully dressed in regular clothes. You can wear a jacket. You can wear a heavy sweater or a blazer.

droans,

If you’re lounging around, 60 is perfect.

If you’re doing work outside, 50 is perfect.

If you’re doing heavy exercise, 40 is perfect.

chicken,

We could make it work like that. Just have the thermometer be narrower at the bottom.

sukhmel,

That’s going to add a lot to simplicity and ease of understanding, for sure. And don’t change the name of the scale or it will be too easy to distinguish them

Lizardking27,

Is a 5/10 average? Or is that 7/10?

SpaceNoodle,

5/7 is perfect

wreckedcarzz,
@wreckedcarzz@lemmy.world avatar

with rice

Maggoty,

50 is indeed perfect.

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

And you get the throphy my man 👍👍👍.

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