You make Americans sound like they are some type of weak, whiny cry-babies that 
can’t ever change its way or learn something new and better.  I suggest we grab 
the bull by the horns and show whiners whose boss.  

Why are you bringing up imperial?  We are discussing the US, not the UK.


From: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, 2014-07-14 01:53
To: U.S. Metric Association 
Subject: [USMA:54123] RE: Don't be a dunce!

If we try to push Americans to do everything all at once, then surely the 
resistence would correspondingly be all that much stronger. I suggest we start 
with the basics (like killing the inch, et cetera). Once we acheive that major 
hurdle, then uniformity details will naturally evolve. One step at a time 
please. Boil the Imperial frog slowly. If we crank up the heat too high, then 
the Imperial frog will jump out of the pot. (Sorry if that analogy seems a 
little inappropriate, but I think you get my point.) By the way, the Wikimedia 
Foundation (WMF) is an American non-profit and charitable organization 
headquartered in San Francisco, California, so I am not surprised that many 
Americanisms take precedence in the midst of multiple norms. 

----- Message from Michael Payne <[email protected]> ---------
    Date: Mon, 14 Jul 2014 07:18:37 +0200
    From: Michael Payne <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:54122] RE: Don't be a dunce!
      To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
      Cc: USMA <[email protected]>

  I’m not saying you should change formats in your job, but it would be good if 
an organization like Wikipedia which is read worldwide, could adhere to what is 
an internationally recommended standard instead of the de-facto US format for 
numbers.


  If this were done companies like your may adapt to this standard in the 
future.


  Mike Payne

  On 14 Jul 2014, at 07:03, [email protected] wrote:


    I would be fired from my job if I were to insist that we change commas to 
spaces. Get a real-world perspective once in a while. I would LOVE to live in a 
clean, tidy world with uniformity in such matters. I think we would do well to 
pick our battles carefully. This battle is akin to Harold insisting that 
Americans spell metre instead of meter.

    ----- Message from Michael Payne <[email protected]> ---------
        Date: Mon, 14 Jul 2014 06:45:05 +0200
        From: Michael Payne <[email protected]>
    Reply-To: [email protected]
    Subject: [USMA:54120] RE: Don't be a dunce!
          To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>

      I can only speak about the English language Wikipedia. Many English 
speaking nations use the comma as the decimal, South Africa is one, So do the 
French and probably most Europeans. It’s a cleaner way of writing and it works 
for the digits on the right side of the decimal.

      Claiming Americans like their freedom is the same as saying we’ll stick 
with American Customary because we’re free to. It does not help in 
international trade! We need standardisation and this is one standard 
recommended by NIST.

      Mike Payne

      On 14 Jul 2014, at 06:34, Harold_Potsdamer <[email protected]> 
wrote:


        Try checking an authoritative source, like the BIPM before insisting 
Americans has some sort of derogation based on their claimed exceptionalism.

        Here is a style guide from the US construction industry:

        https://www.wbdg.org/ccb/VA/VAMETRIC/guide.pdf


        Rules for Writing Numbers
        -
        Always use decimals, not fractions (write 0.75 g, not ¾g).
        -
        Use a zero before the decimal marker for values less than one (write 
0.45
        g, not .45 g).
        -
        Use spaces instead of commas to separate blocks of three digits for any
        number over four digits (write 45 138 kg or 0.004 46 kg or 4371 kg). 
Note
        that this does not apply to the expression of amounts of money.
        -
        In the United States, the decimal marker is a period; in other 
countries a comma usually is used


        See also 5.3.4 from the NIST guide:

        http://physics.nist.gov/Pubs/SP330/sp330.pdf

        Under what authority do you operate under that gives you the right to 
break the rules?  Those who want to do things their way and think they are 
exceptional are the real dunces.




        From: [email protected]
        Sent: Sunday, 2014-07-13 22:51
        To: U.S. Metric Association
        Subject: [USMA:54114] RE: Don't be a dunce!

        Harold. Americans use commas or spaces. We love our freedom.

        ----- Message from Harold_Potsdamer <[email protected]> ---------
            Date: Sun, 13 Jul 2014 20:07:41 -0400
            From: Harold_Potsdamer <[email protected]>
        Reply-To: [email protected]
        Subject: [USMA:54113] RE: Don't be a dunce!
              To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>

          Not only that, commas dividing thousands which should be spaces.



          From: [email protected]
          Sent: Sunday, 2014-07-13 14:26
          To: U.S. Metric Association
          Subject: [USMA:54111] RE: Don't be a dunce!

          No zeroes on the leading decimals?  Tsk tsk tsk.  :)
           
            -------- Original Message --------
            Subject: [USMA:54110] Don't be a dunce!
            From: [email protected]
            Date: Sun, July 13, 2014 11:22 am
            To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>


            Posted on Facebook and Twitter today:
            Don't be a dunce! http://MetricPioneer.com/Metrication-America
            David Pearl www.MetricPioneer.com 503-428-4917



        ----- End message from Harold_Potsdamer <[email protected]> -----
         

        David Pearl www.MetricPioneer.com 503-428-4917




    ----- End message from Michael Payne <[email protected]> -----
     

    David Pearl www.MetricPioneer.com 503-428-4917



----- End message from Michael Payne <[email protected]> -----



David Pearl www.MetricPioneer.com 503-428-4917

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