Metrication gains the point if the pound(500g) is called *half kilo instead of pound*, but the purpose is defeated if the 'floppy' is called 3.5 inch.
The Pound may be 500 g in Germany, but it is only 454 g in the US. You may still call 500 g a pound, but the scale to measure it still says 500 g. You may use a zollstock, but the units inscribed on them are millimetres. You can call a floppy disk 3.5 in, but that doesn't make it so. The disk is still 90 x 94 x 3.3 mm^3. A sea mile is different from a land mile (1852 m vs. 1609 m). The similarities between units is in their names, which defy the purpsose if allowed to use!
Just because an old name lingers on and things are called by that old name, does not mean the unit has survived; infact it got lingered on, for later confusion.
Regards,
Brij B. Vij TIME: to think Metric!<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <And Calendar too>
From: "Mike Joy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [USMA:24374] Re: iVDR "inch" drives?
Date: Sun, 5 Jan 2003 19:32:49 +0800
An excellent piece of writing, John, and you've made the point very well.
Well-researched posts like this is what we need.
Keep it up.
Mike
----- Original Message -----
From: kilopascal
To: U.S. Metric Association
Sent: Saturday, January 04, 2003 8:30 AM
Subject: [USMA:24349] Re: iVDR "inch" drives?
2003-01-03
I think the person who responded to you needs to be informed that there is a big difference between something having an inch name and something actually being measured in inches. Floppy disks, computer monitors, plumbing, and maybe even tires all have inch names, but the inch names don't even come close to their true dimensions. And most, if not all, of these products are made in metric anyway.
A pfund (pound) may be 500 g in Germany, but it is only 454 g in the US. A sea mile is different from a land mile (1852 m vs. 1609 m). The similarities between units is their names and nothing else. Just because an old name lingers on and things are called by that old name, does not mean the unit has survived.
You may still call 500 g a pfund, but the scale to measure it still says 500 g. You may use a zollstock, but the units inscribed on them are millimetres. You can call a floppy disk 3.5 in, but that doesn't make it so. The disk is still 90 x 94 x 3.3 mm^3. You can call margarine butter, but it is still margarine. The name used does not mean that the name accurately describes the product. Using a wrong name can in fact lead to confusion as when a 3.5 inch is mistakenly referred to as 8,89 cm.
Speaking of zoll, the zoll is/was not equal to an inch:
zoll
the traditional German inch, equal to 1/12 fuss. Originally the zoll was equal to 1.037 inches (about 2.634 centimetres). In Switzerland, it is now considered a metric unit equal to exactly 3 centimetres (1.1811 inches). There's no change in the plural.
In zoll, the floppy disk description can be: 3.42 zoll (90 mm), or 3.38 (3.5 inch), or 3.00 (90 mm based on 30 mm/zoll), or even 2.96 (3.5 inch based on 30 mm/zoll). Take your choice! But, it really doesn't matter what you call it because the dimensions will always be 90 x 94 x 3.3 mm^3.
Now a days it is almost impossible to convert an FFU number to SI. That is because the chances are good that when the original numbers were converted to FFU, they were modified to rational FFU numbers without a change in the product. Thus, when changing back you don't get the original and correct metric value.
Example: 20 mm = 0.787 inch which is rationalised to 0.75 inch. And if back converted to SI, 0.75 inch becomes only 19 mm, a whole millimetre off from the original value.
So, what is really gained by keeping FFU alive? It seems nothing but error and confusion.
John
----- Original Message -----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: U.S. Metric Association
Sent: Friday, 2003-01-03 06:34
Subject: [USMA:24335] iVDR "inch" drives?
Discussion on the Ziff-Davis "ExtremeTech" forum. Feel free to dive in.
http://discuss.extremetech.com/n/main.asp?webtag=extremetech&nav=messages&msg=24566.12
Initial post:
A consortium called iVDR is said to be readying tiny 1.8" and 2.5" hard drives, with removable cartridges, for introduction at the 2003 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. While the disks look like a cool idea, it appears that they may be ...
My response:
What in God's name is this 1.8 "inch" and 2.5 "inch" garbage? These are all metric companies in metric countries. Without doubt these new devices are in hard metric sizes. So why are they using antique units to describe their size? Is this another case of dumbing things down for Americans? The time has long past to ditch the entire archaic and obsolete inch-pound measurement system -- and any retrograde reference to it.
A response to that:
I don't think they're dumbing anything down for Americans, it's just that some things are still traditionally measured in inches. In Europe we still have inch sizes for car, motorcycle and bicycle wheels. In Germany at least, plumbing pipes and fittings are still done in inches, and we use 3,5" and not 8,89cm floppies. A ruler here is still called a Zollstock (an "inch stick"),one half kilo a Pfund (pound) and the international standard for sea-going vessels is sea miles, so the metric system hasn't completely taken over everything.
My further response:
The "3.5 inch" diskette is a myth. The Japanese designed it in the 1980's as exactly 90 mm. Calling it "8.89 cm" is a clumsy back-conversion from the inch description. IBM, one of the first users of this device, dumbed down the size description for the US audience, much as my local grocery chain dumbs down a 2 liter soda bottle to "67.6 ounces".
Now, the old 5.5 inch diskette that really WAS a floppy (bendable, not stiff) -- that WAS 5.5 inches. We know where that format has gone. With one of the removable disks given an inch size, IBM felt compelled to give the other the same thing, even when it didn't apply.
The antique system still used by some in the USA should have been tossed in the dustbin of history long ago.
Carleton MacDonald
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