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Cake day: May 4th, 2024

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  • pumpkinseedoil@mander.xyztoScience Memes@mander.xyzSeriously.
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    2 days ago

    0°F is the coldest night Mister Fahrenheit has ever witnessed, thinking it couldn’t become any colder than this.

    100°F is Mister Fahrenheit’s slightly feverish body temperature.

    ???

    PS: Pretty much all other countries also had their own measurement systems and simply switched to metric because it made sense. I’m glad we did, and that pretty much all others did too.

    PPS: I’d also be up for revamping time measurement, why can’t we have 10h a day, 100 minutes per hour, 100 seconds per minute? 100.000 seconds in total per day, currently we have 86.400 so a second would only become slightly shorter.

    The French tried to implement that in the First Republic, together with 12 months à 30 days per year, 3 weeks à 10 days per month and 5 (6) extra days at the end of the year to make it work (from Christmas to New Year, how thematic!)

    It failed because the French were fearing they’d have to work more (if they’d also only have 2 days off per 10d instead of per 7d). One of the biggest tragedies in French history. Without the week reform the time reform might’ve succeeded.


  • pumpkinseedoil@mander.xyztoScience Memes@mander.xyzSeriously.
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    1 day ago

    Fully agree with you. How does that make sense:

    Really hot summer days (30°C) are 86°F

    Usual summer days (25°C) are 77°F

    Room temperature is ~70°F

    Spring / autumn days (20°C) are 68°F

    Chilly outside / late autumn / early spring days (~10°C) are 50°F

    Cool outside / warm winter days (~0°C) are 32°F

    Cold outside / usual winter days (-10°C) are ~15°F

    Winter nights (bit below -20°C) are ~ -10°F

    Fahrenheit users keep saying how strange it is to have negative temperatures when using °C, but it’s just the same in Fahrenheit except the whole scale makes less sense since it’s using fully arbitrary, not recreatable points for 0 and 100.



  • pumpkinseedoil@mander.xyztoScience Memes@mander.xyzMushroom ID
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    5 days ago

    Where I live (mountainous region in Austria) they are everywhere. I just go hiking for a bit so I’m at not too frequented spots and then I can just pick as many as I need, often the floor nearly is more yellow than brown on certain spots.

    We don’t have white oaks here but they typically grow in needle forests.

    (And we call them Eierschwammerl = egg mushrooms, to explain my previous comment, I just think that sounds much nicer than chanterelles)

    Image of a typical spot, took it a month ago ^




  • From my limited insight (only seeing it on the internet since this only exists in English) it seems to be a loose term to refer to many, but not all progressive societal movements that contradict the world view of the last few decades.

    Examples: LGBTQIA+ culture (pride month / parade, featuring them in movies/books (this one isn’t new but still apparently counts as woke), …), new laws to require a certain percentage of [whatever, for example a company’s employees] to be female / to be coloured, …

    Somehow apparently not included (correct me if I’m wrong, again, I only know this term from the internet): Women getting less children but working more, the fight for equality for women.

    So far I’ve usually seen it in negative context, not always but often hostile.



  • I really don’t get why the USA does this.

    In developing countries it’s understandable that the state can’t pay for education, but in a first world country (at least in the cold war era meaning) it’s insane that education is FOR PROFIT.

    In Europe the countries don’t pay for education out of pure idealism. Educating a large percentage of the population is needed for a functioning and stable democracy (that hopefully doesn’t fall for populism, although we’re currently fighting with that too, still far better than the USA’s Trump cult) and especially needed for staying internationally competitive in the long term.

    Just a few days ago I’ve paid my fee for this semester, studying at a well known university (not worldwide but at least in my country and neighbouring countries) with a good reputation: 24.70€ (27.3$). I could also pay the same at an internationally more known uni but they’re pretty similar quality-wise, the other just is in a bigger city = has more students = publishes more.

    For international students from non-eu-countries it’s ~750€ per semester, still not that much.