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Comic strip of a ghost and a person with the American flag pasted on the head. The ghost repeats “Boo!” in the first three panels without getting any reaction, but when it in the fourth panel says “kg, cm, km, °C” the American gets scared and screams “AHHHH!!!”.

Edit: fixed alt text

  • Masimatutu@lemm.eeOP
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    8 months ago

    I mean… I could say the same thing about Celsius and it would make the exact same amount of sense.

      • Masimatutu@lemm.eeOP
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        8 months ago

        100°C is an acceptable sauna temperature. You won’t last much longer naked in 0°C!

        Edit: To make my point more clear, I know some crazy people who go directly from a close to 100 degree sauna to a close to 0 degree ice bath. I think that could be described quite well as going from 100 to 0 % within the human temperature tolerance.

        Also, that’s not my initial point. My initial point was that “percent hot outside” means nothing in Fahrenheit or Celsius.

        (whoops, pressed delete instead of edit)

    • alcoholicorn [comrade/them, doe/deer]@hexbear.net
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      8 months ago

      It has never been literally boiling outside (except for when you’re in the middle of a forest fire or next to a lava flow).

      Besides, Fahrenheit is more scientific because it translates 1:1 to Rankine, where 0 is absolute zero.

      • Masimatutu@lemm.eeOP
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        8 months ago

        Percent of what, exactly? It has been a lot more than 100 Fahrenheit and a lot less than 0.

        Edit: Kelvin is the scientific standard with 0 at absolute zero, and that translates directly to Celsius.

          • Masimatutu@lemm.eeOP
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            8 months ago

            Are you just trolling? “100% hot out” literally doesn’t mean anything.

            Edit: Ah, I see :P

            But the human body temp isn’t 100 °F, though

                  • Masimatutu@lemm.eeOP
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                    8 months ago

                    I found it on Wikipedia. At first, he fixed zero at the stable temperature of a “mixture of ice, water, and salis Armoniaci [transl. ammonium chloride]” and 96 at the human body temperature, but later he would change the lower reference point to water’s freezing point at 32 and still later the upper one to the boiling point of water at 212. So it has always been pretty arbitrary.

                    Edit: But I will agree that the scale of zero to one hundred does correspond more closely to how warm humans feel.