[gameprogrammer] Re: Juan Carlos Cazar is out of the office.

  • From: "Ray Gomez-Bravo" <rgomezbravo@xxxxxxx>
  • To: <gameprogrammer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 9 Oct 2006 11:34:48 -0700

Personally, I think it's a matter of choice at the time one is being
taught measurements.  Everybody wants a piece of the pie (p) along with
their irrational numbers.  It doesn't matter what system you use,
eventually things get irrational.  As far as time formats I always use
yymmdd.hhmm because the operating system sort files with the same name,
but different times, in proper order.
 
-----Original Message-----
From: gameprogrammer-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:gameprogrammer-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Alan Wolfe
Sent: Monday, October 09, 2006 11:08 AM
To: gameprogrammer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [gameprogrammer] Re: Juan Carlos Cazar is out of the office.
 
"Unfortunatly a year has 365 days not 100 that would be much easier"
 
Thats a good point and I'd bet that's where the non-metric system came
from; coming from necesity and usefulness instead of mathematical purity
(ie 1 foot = the length of a persons foot on average, measuring horses
in "hands" etc) (: 
 
It seems that some parts of science and math have always been at odds
with the natural world, trying to make mountains into cones, cuts of
wood into perfect rectangles, making the world into a perfect globe.
 
But then again there are things like fractals, neural networks and fuzzy
logic that try to work within the realities of the universe instead of
trying to get those realities to fit into man made aproximations so who
knows, maybe some day we'll be saying "Wow I can't believe we still use
the metric system!" 

 
On 10/9/06, Christoph Harder <shadowomf@xxxxxxxx> wrote: 
Thanks for the explanation of this am/pm-thing.

Luckily in germany we use almost everywhere metric formats, only for 
rims and displays we use inch.
Unfortunatly a year has 365 days not 100 that would be much easier :)


Bob Pendleton wrote:
> On Mon, 2006-10-09 at 07:55 -0700, David Cornell wrote:
>
>> I'm American and I can't understand why we had to be so different and

>> use our own systems of measure instead of Metric.
>>
>
> Oh, it is weirder than most people imagine. But, since 1893 all US
> weights and measures are defined in terms of the metric system. So we 
> can at least convert from one system to the other.
>
>
>>   Honestly, I think just keeping everything convertible by multiples
>> of 10 would be FAR easier.  I still need a chart to tell me how many 
>> pints are in a gallon.  Oh well, wishing and wondering don't change
>> anything.
>>
>
> I agree completely. President Carter tried very hard to convert the US
> to metric. That was when we started getting metric sizes and weights
on 
> things you buy at the store. He tried to get speed limits posted in
KPH
> and MPH, but that didn't last long. And, for a while the speedometers
in
> cars had scales in MPH and KPH, but that eventually went away. 
>
> We will only change when we are forced by economic necessity to
change.
>
>               Bob Pendleton
>


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