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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: August 14th, 2023

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  • Decimeters are great. You should try to use them more.

    Something that is like 2.5 ft. I can easily convert to 7.5 decimeters. Then .75 meters. There is no way i could convert 2.5 ft to meters without some serious thinking, and paper would help.

    Precise has nothing to do with what units you use. Mm is not more precise than Cm

    36.982 mm is 3.6982 cm. They are both as precise as each other.

    Humans are much better at knowing an inch or a foot in distance than a yard or a meter.

    If I said, draw a line that is 4in or 1 decimeter. You would be closer than trying to draw a meter line.

    I work in building in the US. I know an inch and a foot like the back of my hand. I never deal with yards. For yards, I’d just think of it in feet and ×3. Just like I’d do with decimeters.

    I know the metric system, but my default unit is US Customary.

    If I had to look at a room, I could tell you instantly if it was either 25 or 30 ft. If you asked for meters I couldn’t just say “I know exactly how long a meter is (without thinking about it being basically a yard), that wall is closer to 7 meters than 9 meters”

    I’d have to constantly work with meters to do that. Which I don’t.

    I’m not against things being gradually changed to metric. A lot of things are in metric. Like a 2L bottle of soda. If you put a pitcher of water in front of me and asked how many liters. I’d have to think of the 2L bottle. Just like if you asked for gallons, I’d think of a milk jug. Now I have a good grip on what 5 gallons is because that’s the standard construction bucket, but 5L is 2.5 2L sodas.

    I wouldn’t be nearly as precise if I used metric without decimeters. Inches and Feet are the measurements I use the majority of the time. Even a 100ft wall is a 100ft wall. It’s never referred to as a 33.33 yard wall. Using a metric unit closest to inches and feet is beneficial for me.


  • 1000 centimeters sounds ridiculous

    Guess I could have said 1 decameter

    1 decimeter is a 1/3 of a foot. Assumed a flamethrower shoots >30ft. 30×3=90. ~100 decimeters.

    You could change it to 10 meters easily if you prefer it that way. A third of a foot or 9/10 of a yard. I find it easier to compare it to a third of a foot.

    Like I’m 6ft tall. I’m 18 decimeters, or 1.8 meters. Otherwise, I would have said 2 yards or 2 meters.


  • distance in a controlled, directed manner.

    Interesting take.

    You’re thinking of a flamethrower as it has to be a weapon and trying to fit the definition around that.

    If I had a device that throws flames, let’s say 100 decimeters. Is it a flamethrower? Am I really controlling the flames at the farthest distance? I would say no because the objective of the device is to throw the flame as far as possible. Compared to a torch that could burn a bullseye at 100 decimeters, flamethrower would just burn the whole target.


  • A flamethrower is a ranged incendiary device.

    What do you consider a flamethrower?

    How far is ranged?

    Construction uses what I would call torches, not flamethrowers

    There is very few cases where you want to “throw” flames. It’s inefficient. Keeping the flame and the material close is preferred.

    Giant pile of tar you want to set on fire as fast as possible? I guess a flamethrower is effective. Burning brush, anything where you’re catching something on fire so it spreads.

    They use “flamethrowers” on bitumen roofs. But the idea behind the tool is to not throw the flames as far as possible.

    I’d define flamethrower as “An incendiary device that disperses uncontrollable flames at a distance”













  • but it’s hard to then build the services that this many people need

    The idea is that there are the same amount of people on the island.

    Island 1 might need 2 small schools to serve the top and bottom of island.

    Island 2 could put one large school in walking distance of living building.

    One large school is much cheaper than multiple smaller ones.

    Same with things like fire stations. You only need one around the living building on island 2. One station on island 1 might not be in range of all the homes.



  • You can donate blood in 20 minutes. It takes an hour plus to donate plasma

    Am I going to sit in a chair for an hour plus without any compensation? Maybe once or twice here and there. But you can donate plasma at least twice a week.

    It requires two donations for a single unit. If you donate once and don’t donate the second, then your first donation is unusable. You have to get them to donate twice.

    When I was donating plasma, it paid about $75 for each donation. 50 first, 100 for second. The money is pretty good. $300 a month is a lot for a lot of people.

    If you didn’t compensate people for plasma donations, a lot wouldn’t do it. They currently need more people to donate.

    Plasma “donation” is a good thing.



  • Fear of losing basic income is a great crime deterrent.

    Are you going to steal from that gas station if you could lose your basic monthly check for 20+ years?

    You think kids would drive drunk if you told them that if they were caught, they would lose their basic income for life? Most think it’s a slap on the wrist, maybe some community service, IF they get caught.