• Nate
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    157 hours ago

    It was designed as a test to be up the for 6 months, with no self propulsion.

    It stated up and operational for 2 years.

  • finley
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    1610 hours ago

    The flame that burns twice as bright burns for half as long

  • @[email protected]
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    -2917 hours ago

    imagine kilomile per hour, would americans understand? it’d just be 1 space moved in the current title

    • Rekall IncorporatedOP
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      1315 hours ago

      I lived in North America for ~10 years, the whole time I still converted miles / pounds / fahrenheit into real units in my head.

      To this day, feet/yards etc. sounds like made up measures to me.

    • @[email protected]
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      1216 hours ago

      As long as you’ve taken science/math in school, you should be able to piece it together. No one uses imperial units for computation really, especially in academia. Also if you say 17 KMPH, most will read it as 17 kilometers per hour…even those steeped in the metric system. Please attack the American education system in general and “no child left behind” instead of our choice of distance/speed units on road signs.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 hour ago

        Hell, I’m old enough to be a parent/grandparent to most of Lemmy, and I learned metric over 40 years ago…in a small rural US grade school.

        Guess what - back then the UK still hadn’t fully settled on metric, they didn’t “fully” convert until the mid-80’s if I remember right.

        And they still use feet, mph, stone, etc, as they choose.

        This whole metric arrogance thing is tiresome (and I vastly prefer it for many things, because of Base 10, so really it’s a Base 10 preference).