Fridgeratr,

As a Wisconsinite, 50° IS perfect!

BigBananaDealer,
@BigBananaDealer@lemm.ee avatar

as a minnesotan 50° is pretty fuckin warm in this months

NoSpiritAnimal,
@NoSpiritAnimal@lemmy.world avatar

69°F

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

nixcamic,

I’ve lived in 3 different countries in like 5 different climate zones and none of them had temperatures that fit nicely in the 0-100⁰F range.

bigschnitz,

I’m similar, but two of the countries I’ve lived in are Australia (Victoria, central QLD and NorthWest WA) and the USA (Texas and Pennsylvania), so I’ve lived in 6 very different climates (also lived in the UAE)

The only one of these that got even close to 0°f was Pennsylvania, which over a few years has a few nights that dropped below 20°f, which was slightly less common as Victoria and central QLD seeing 120°f. WA and UAE frequently saw 120°f in the summer, a similar rate to Texas seeing 100°f (where I was) this last summer.

I doubt there are very many places where you’d reasonably expect to see 0°f and 100°f in the same year.

nixcamic, (edited )

Where I live now stays between 30 and 90F. I lived in Saskatchewan and it would go between -40 and 100F. Crazy weather. Closest was maybe Denver but even Denver gets into the -20s F regularly.

ferralcat,

I grew up in Iowa which would see 0f and 100f every year easily. Now I live in Bangkok which is basically just 90-100 year round. I’m not sure Celsius helps either that much. But outside Iowa I haven’t cared much about the temp outside ever either.

nixcamic,

But Iowa gets well below 0f which is my point, people who say 0-100 encompasses outdoors temperatures well live in a very specific area.

0ops,

I dunno, here in the Rockies that doesn’t sound that weird. High altitude, low humidity. We’ll get at least one or two 100+ heat waves in the summer (106 is the hottest I’ve seen here), and in the winter it can drop below zero at night. Granted, the last couple decades has made the former more common and the latter less, so I don’t know if we’ll see sub 0 this year. It used to be pretty common though

captain_aggravated,
@captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

North Carolina spends its summers in the high 90’s and its winters in the high 20’s. We nearly never hit 0°F.

Dianoga,

It works pretty well for Minnesota. In a normal year we’ll have a few days that fall out of each side of that range.

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

A_Chilean_Cyborg,
@A_Chilean_Cyborg@feddit.cl avatar

gringo coping.

Waluigis_Talking_Buttplug,

50 degrees is perfect for me, t shirt and shorts weather.

EyesInTheBoat,
@EyesInTheBoat@lemmy.world avatar

Every time someone brings this up, another decade gets added until the US switches to Metric

NaoPb, (edited )

You mean another eagle and five hamburgers.

elscallr, (edited )
@elscallr@lemmy.world avatar

Weather/room temp wise we probably never will. I’d rather think of my environment in terms of 0 to 100 than in terms of -18 to 38. For science and engineering, Celsius is ideal, and I can convert between the two in the very rare occasion I need to because I’m not an idiot who can’t do basic math.

ferralcat,

Celcius us a horrible scale for science or engineering. The world literally explodes when water freezes.

elscallr,
@elscallr@lemmy.world avatar

Oh shit I better pull that ice out of my freezer then, I about blew up the world

Sanyanov, (edited )

That’s entirely a matter of habit. There is nothing special about 0°F (random point in the cold range?) or 100°F points (random point in the hot range?), you’ve been lied to.

We don’t think -18°C to 38°C, we think -50°C to +50°C (regular Celsius weather thermometer, covers almost any temperature observed on Earth), with 0°C differentiating between snow/ice, “wintery” weather, and rain/mud, “non-wintery” one. That’s how we know whether to take umbrella (no point if it snows, hat is your best friend), what kind of shoes are the best fit - cold-resistant or highly waterproof - or which kind of jacket is gonna fit the situation. Melting point of water is actually incredibly important weather-wise and entirely ignored by Fahrenheit scale.

When it’s not winter, normal range is 0-40°C, with 20°C designating comfort temperature.

captain_aggravated,
@captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

Aviation is already backwards; aviators give distance to travel in nautical miles, visibility in statute miles, altitude and runway length in feet, speed in knots, weight in pounds, volume in gallons, and temperature in celsius. My favorite is the standard adiabatic lapse rate is given as 2°C/1000 feet.

basxto,
@basxto@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

For science and engineering, Celsius is ideal,

The SI base unit for temperature is Kelvin with 0 K being the coldest possible temperature. 273.15 K is the melting point of ice. But it’s a lot better suited for temperature differences. Celsius is only a derived unit.

And well, all units and measurement systems had a lot of changes over time because some things turned out to be impractical or inaccurate.

Initially Celsius had 100° as the freezing point of water, 0° as the boiling point of water. Fahrenheit had 0° as the coldest temperature he could produce and the (wrong) average human body temperature at 90°. Kelvin was initially defined via Celsius, that got reversed, they have the same scale. There is also Rankine, which starts at 0 like Kelvin, but uses the Fahrenheit scale.

And the US partially uses SI units anyways, all units are derived from them to use their superior base unit definitions. This system came into existence to have unit definitions that are better reproducible and change less over time. Since everything was redefined and all numbers changed anyways, they also tried to make use of the “new” decimal representation of numbers. And new unit names were nice to create some general units, in contrast to foot and pound, which were always different from place to place, at times even from city to city.

I don’t expect the US to ever switch. The US switched to international yard and pound instead of switching to a decimal system. After US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa agreed on that one, all countries who remained using these units had a uniform definition for them. Since then you don’t need to know any longer which yard or pound it was. Though not all units got standardized by that.

And some countries didn’t drop all old units and metricized some instead. Even SI kept the ton(ne). You can’t know what 1t exactly means without knowing the context, it can be 2240lb, 2000lb or 1000kg (~2204.6226lb).

DumbAceDragon,
@DumbAceDragon@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yes

Wilzax, (edited )

Indoor temp? No. Outdoor temp? Yes!

Aux,

No and no.

JigglySackles,

50 is perfect to me.

TimewornTraveler,

I love a 50

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.

littlecolt,

Uh.

50° is fucking perfect.

I love low to mid 50’s. Yes I am white and overweight, no further follow-up questions, please.

feedum_sneedson,

and then they just start fucking, in the grass, presumably

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