On 2008 Jan 9 , at 6:03 AM, Michael Payne wrote:

(In a coffee shop) Small, Medium and Large as 8, 12 & 16 oz ... I asked the server how many milliliters? He had no idea.

Did you tell ("educate") him?

To be fairly exact, tell him the cups are 240 mL 360 mL and 480 mL, or suggest that when great precision is not necessary, the smallest and largest are 250 mL and 500 mL, or a quarter litre and a half litre, respectively.

You might feign ignorance about why they middle size would be such an awkward number (360 or, less precisely, 375) and that making good use of the metric system would probably simplify that to something like 350 or 400 mL.

One could take it one step farther, of course, and suggest a really simple set of sizes would by 300 mL, 400 mL and 500 mL. These are not exactly equal to 8, 12 and 16 fl.oz. but are a reasonable and useful alternative. They would have the public relations value that they are ALL A BIT LARGER than the corresponding 8, 12 or 16 fl.oz. sizes.

When will some of these businesses take advantage of the metric system to boost their sales instead of fighting it and losing money???



Regards,
Bill Hooper
Fernandina Beach, Florida, USA

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   Make It Simple; Make It Metric!
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