[ RadSafe ] SI; Now or never?

Dimiter Popoff didi at tgi-sci.com
Fri Feb 17 02:21:07 CST 2006


I suspected something like that :-).
My guess is that the radiation units are those taking about the
least effort to switch. I doubt there are many people who
grew up in the US and think millimeters rather than fractions
of an inch, litres rather than gallons/pints (whatever....:-),
kmph rather than mph etc...
 The chip industry has made the move - they just specify
dimensions both in millimters and inches, and, well, we all
use Volts, Amps, Watts etc.
 I do wonder how it is with temperatures. Those of the
listmembers doing lab work must be used to degree Celsius (and/or
Kelvin), however, when it comes to weather - do they still think
Fahrenheit? My guess is they have developed a precise
calculator to do the conversion a long time ago (I have
to struggle every time I am confronted with degree F,
although evenually I manage it... :-).

Dimiter


------------------------------------------------------
Dimiter Popoff               Transgalactic Instruments

http://www.tgi-sci.com
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>  -------Original Message-------
>  From: A  Karam <paksbi at rit.edu>
>  Subject: RE: [ RadSafe ] SI; Now or never?
>  Sent: Feb 17 '06 06:04
>  
>  My understanding is that the first bill to change the US to SI units was introduced in the early 1800s.  Still working on the details....
>  
>  Andy
>  
>  P. Andrew Karam, Ph.D., CHP
>  Assistant Professor
>  Rochester Institute of Technology
>  
>  ________________________________
>  
>  From: radsafe-bounces at radlab.nl on behalf of John R Johnson
>  Sent: Thu 2/16/2006 21:39
>  To: Radsafe
>  Subject: [ RadSafe ] SI; Now or never?
>  
>  
>  
>  RADSAFERS
>  
>  When will the US convert to the SI units? If I recall correctly, the
>  conversion was going to be completed in ~1990.
>  
>  What is the current status?
>  
>  _________________
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