Anons argue in comments

  • TehWorld@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Because showing up to a client meeting dripping in sweat on a 103 degree day is considered to be poor form. Because I got a new job and don’t have an extra two hours in my day to ride a bike back and forth, and moving isn’t in the cards. Because I have to carry a couple kids and all the crap the goes along with them.

    • glitchdx@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      because the US sucks ass and the entire world just does what the US does is also sucking of the ass.

      It’s not that I disagree with you, it’s that we can do better and we’re not.

    • Tuukka R@sopuli.xyz
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      6 hours ago

      Why would a person ride their bike so fast that they end up dripping in sweat? Is there a reason for that?

          • shortrounddev@lemmy.world
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            6 hours ago

            If you were in a car you wouldn’t be hot. 103 is very hot, not safe for old people to be outside for very long. It’s 103 degrees, so quite hot

            • Tuukka R@sopuli.xyz
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              6 hours ago

              “103 degrees” means that it’s hot enough for water to boil. Water boils at 100 degrees, unless you’re deep underground.

              But okay, it sounds like that’s a very rare temperature, then?

                  • Tuukka R@sopuli.xyz
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                    2 hours ago

                    Not my experience. I spent some 4 months at Goa in India, and it was usually around 40°C. I rented a bicycle there and rode it for distances of over 100 km in a day. And I did not sweat.

                    That temperature should not be a problem for a person living in an area where that’s a common temperature. And if it’s not a common temperature, then it’s not common, and it’s not really a problem to have to pay the taxi if you need to go to an important meeting precisely on the one scorching hot day :)

                    I was assuming from the context that it would translate to more like 50°C or so.

                • Tuukka R@sopuli.xyz
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                  2 hours ago

                  Heh.

                  It’s impolite to use only Fahrenheits on an international forum. Most readers won’t be able to make heads or tails of “103 degrees”, so a person posting on an international forum should definitely bother checking what that’s in Celcius. It’s much less work for the person writing the text to check that than thousand individual readers checking the same thing on Google.

                  If it’s somehow “okay” to ignore the 95 % of the world that has no idea of Fahrenheit, then it is similarly okay to be as if Fahrenheit didn’t exist.

                  I simply let the impolite person taste his own medicine. And no, I still don’t know if “103 degrees” equals 30°C, 45°C or 55°C. But the description “very uncomfortably hot” is absolutely enough to get what the person was talking about. So, some temperature that is unusual where the person writing the comment lives.