This image seems very wrong, as far as I know Australia, Canada, Ireland, and pretty much most of Europe should all be orange or purple and the United States should be red or orange. The Metric Conversion Act of 1975 was voluntary only.
Australia went metric in the early 1970s, the only imperial vestiges remaining are a tendency to quote height in feet and inches as well as cm (younger people are as likely to use metric, old people cling to feet for that), literally everything else is metric unless dealing with the US forces it - ie car tyres worldwide are inches.
The only imperial units I’ve ever seen in Europe, excluding the UK, are pipes and screen sizes where we use inches. Which is quite curious, since nobody knows how long an inch is, so TV sizes are basically an abstract unit that we memorize.
Pipes are the same, people know what a 1/2 or 3/4 pipe is, but I’d bet nobody thinks of that as the same unit they use for TVs.
The screen sizes thing is pretty recent. Back in the day when we still used CRT’s it was common to use centimeters for TV sizes. It only really changed once TV’s got bigger.
Pretty much all of Europe has been officially metric for over 100 years.
The relevant Wiki says Australia and Canada are officially metric since 1970, but that Canada halted metrification in 1985 and uses a lot of US customary units due to high reliance on US manufacturing.
Their news is going to always be in whatever old or weird measurement they use. It’s not intended for the world.
Their president has been comparing the size of the reflection pool to skyscrapers. Which is weird because they’ll often talk about the scale of a skyscraper in olympic swimming pools. And we know that’s always 50m so it’s easy to know what the skyscraper is in metric compared to if they used feet. If Trump would just say how many swimming pools the reflection pool is, everyone would be happy.
But anyway, point is; England training camp is about 161 Olympic swimming pools away from the shooting.
It really works either way
This image seems very wrong, as far as I know Australia, Canada, Ireland, and pretty much most of Europe should all be orange or purple and the United States should be red or orange. The Metric Conversion Act of 1975 was voluntary only.
Australia went metric in the early 1970s, the only imperial vestiges remaining are a tendency to quote height in feet and inches as well as cm (younger people are as likely to use metric, old people cling to feet for that), literally everything else is metric unless dealing with the US forces it - ie car tyres worldwide are inches.
The only imperial units I’ve ever seen in Europe, excluding the UK, are pipes and screen sizes where we use inches. Which is quite curious, since nobody knows how long an inch is, so TV sizes are basically an abstract unit that we memorize.
Pipes are the same, people know what a 1/2 or 3/4 pipe is, but I’d bet nobody thinks of that as the same unit they use for TVs.
The screen sizes thing is pretty recent. Back in the day when we still used CRT’s it was common to use centimeters for TV sizes. It only really changed once TV’s got bigger.
I only have vague recollections of those days, but if you ask me, we used to measure TVs by the Kg… Those things were beefy AF.
Same in Australia. We measure tvs and monitors in inches, but literally no idea what an inch is lol
Canada is mixed for sure.
Pretty much all of Europe has been officially metric for over 100 years.
The relevant Wiki says Australia and Canada are officially metric since 1970, but that Canada halted metrification in 1985 and uses a lot of US customary units due to high reliance on US manufacturing.
But if they did what you suggest then they couldn’t bash America as easily. Come on! Get with the program!
Their news is going to always be in whatever old or weird measurement they use. It’s not intended for the world.
Their president has been comparing the size of the reflection pool to skyscrapers. Which is weird because they’ll often talk about the scale of a skyscraper in olympic swimming pools. And we know that’s always 50m so it’s easy to know what the skyscraper is in metric compared to if they used feet. If Trump would just say how many swimming pools the reflection pool is, everyone would be happy.
But anyway, point is; England training camp is about 161 Olympic swimming pools away from the shooting.
That’s neat. But unrelated to the conversation. Thanks though.