My contribution...
Attachment 43761
The legend at the bottom is so true. DAMHIKT.
Printable View
My contribution...
Attachment 43761
The legend at the bottom is so true. DAMHIKT.
Well, there was a study done a while back that showed somewhere north of 80% of Americans believe they are either in the top 20% of income earners or close to it. I never knew it was so crowded at the yacht harbor!
Life's hard by the yard, by the inch it's a cinch. Try metricating that.
In response to Hemmjo, in Australia tyre sizes use inches to signify wheel diameter. So 255/65 R17 is an example the 17 being inches. The only other aberration I am aware of is altitude measurement for aircraft which is in feet, I guess for safety reasons. Similarly aircraft airspeed and nautical speed is measured in knots or nautical miles per hour, a nautical mile being, I think an arbitrary division used for increments of latitude and longitude which assists in navigation calculations.
And that is the reason why most are broke and don't even know it, even if they all woke up one morning to find they no longer owed anything on any type of credit, and those who play the stock markets found out they no longer held any investment capital aside from their original cash investment none of them would be able to last 6 months on what little real income or actual cash on hand they possessed before once again finding themselves up to their eyebrows in debt.
Well, if we are doing pi jokes:
https://diqn32j8nouaz.cloudfront.net..._you_comic.jpg
A quote from...
https://www.sciencefriday.com/segmen...e-really-need/
Mathematician James Grime of the YouTube channel Numberphile has determined that 39 digits of pi—
3.14159265358979323846264338327950288420
—would suffice to calculate the circumference of the known universe to the width of a hydrogen atom. (That number is rounded, for those of you keeping track.)
My alma mater has pi to a billion digits available for your delectation...
https://stuff.mit.edu/afs/sipb/contrib/pi/
[QUOTE=mklotz;211017]A quote from...
https://www.sciencefriday.com/segmen...e-really-need/
Mathematician James Grime of the YouTube channel Numberphile has determined that 39 digits of pi—
3.14159265358979323846264338327950288420
—would suffice to calculate the circumference of the known universe to the width of a hydrogen atom. (That number is rounded, for those of you keeping track.)
JPL, on the other hand tracks Voyager 1 using pi rounded only to a measly 15 digits. https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/edu/news/20...e-really-need/