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Joined 19 days ago
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Cake day: January 13th, 2026

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  • Probably around $200-250 depending on the month. I spend $20-40 per grocery run, and shop twice a week most weeks. It was higher when I first moved because I was buying the bulk staples that I just keep stocked (rice, vanilla, salt, etc, gave all of it to my old room mate when we moved), but it’s gone down since. I think I spent about $400 the first month, $300 the second, and it’s probably gonna go down again in the next couple months.

    I used to spend $80/mo, but that’s when eggs were $1.29 for 18, spam was $2 a can, and milk was $1.50/gallon.

    sigh That wasn’t even “Back in my day” that was like 6 years ago. Fuck these prices.



  • From the wikipedia article:

    The plural stone is often used when providing a weight (e.g. “this sack weighs 8 stone”).[34] A person’s weight is usually quoted in stone and pounds in English-speaking countries that use the avoirdupois system, with the exception of the United States and Canada, where it is usually quoted in pounds.

    Which I checked for fun. I love how they say that like therr are more than 4 countries fitting that description. 2 of them use stone, 2 don’t, at least I think. Can’t find anything official on whether Liberia uses it or not, but I’ve heard UK people say it.

    Just the fact that they say it like it’s not a 50/50 split xD


  • I’m fairly certain the only reason we don’t know the things Fahrenheit was based on is because he didn’t write it down.

    While Celsius is based on something real (the freezing, and boiling points of distilled water at sea level), it’s not something that someone can measure at most locations? Fahrenheit has the same issue, mind you, the only calibration point it had that’s always measurable is the average body temperature, which is also inconsistent, as anyone who’s tried getting pregnant will know.

    At the end of the day anything we base a temperature scale on could be considered arbitrary, though modern Fahrenheit is also based on freezing/boiling water, we just put the points at 32 and 212 (180 degrees between) instead of 0 and 100 (100 degrees between). AFAIK the reason the freezing point is at 32 was because the original 0 point was based on the freezing point of a brine solution? Either way, point is now they’re both based on the same thing: When a specific uncontaminated liquid changes phases at on specific parts of the planet that don’t exist in a lot of countries