Freedom Units? Kek, nobody in Europe would ever use that mess.
I am fluent English reader, I can read anything in English, I read more English than Czech. I do not need a dictionary. But whenever I stumble upon imperial units, I need a calculator to get an idea. Fahrenheit is the worst of them all. I would rather read Klingon poetry.
Metric units are intuitive and easy. You will learn that in no time.
Fahrenheit is the best of the freedom units, as aside from where the 0 and 100 points are, it works exactly the same as in metric. They both have negative numbers despite temperature being absolute, so they're both not perfect.
I'd argue that the best system would be a mix, where 0 is where water freezes and 100 is the human body temperature. Would be even more precise, and more useful in your day. With C you almost need to use a decimal place since the "safe zone" is only 37 numbers. With F you'd have 66 numbers for that same range. With this you'd have 100. And you're not getting rid of negative numbers, otherwise we'd all just use kelvins.
I suppose its all about what you're brought up on though.
Fahrenheit is the worst because it is not possible to convert to the metric equivalent by a single mathematical operation (multiplication or division) - you have to both add/subtract and multiply/divide. Miles, feet, gallons... all are hard to use, but at least it is quite easy to get an idea how long a feet is, but Fahrenheit is complete non-intuitive clusterfuck because of the two operations necessary.
Celsius is at least easily convertible to Kelvin (by just shifting the zero point).
Fahrenheit is better for weather temperatures because you don't even need the last digit. The range of 10 degrees is precise enough that you know how to dress for it to stay comfortable, whether to bring supplies and what kind to deal with heat/cold, etc. That's the only thing I can think of where it outperforms Celsius, though.
Freedom Units? Kek, nobody in Europe would ever use that mess.
I am fluent English reader, I can read anything in English, I read more English than Czech. I do not need a dictionary. But whenever I stumble upon imperial units, I need a calculator to get an idea. Fahrenheit is the worst of them all. I would rather read Klingon poetry.
Metric units are intuitive and easy. You will learn that in no time.
Fahrenheit is the best of the freedom units, as aside from where the 0 and 100 points are, it works exactly the same as in metric. They both have negative numbers despite temperature being absolute, so they're both not perfect.
I'd argue that the best system would be a mix, where 0 is where water freezes and 100 is the human body temperature. Would be even more precise, and more useful in your day. With C you almost need to use a decimal place since the "safe zone" is only 37 numbers. With F you'd have 66 numbers for that same range. With this you'd have 100. And you're not getting rid of negative numbers, otherwise we'd all just use kelvins.
I suppose its all about what you're brought up on though.
Fahrenheit is the worst because it is not possible to convert to the metric equivalent by a single mathematical operation (multiplication or division) - you have to both add/subtract and multiply/divide. Miles, feet, gallons... all are hard to use, but at least it is quite easy to get an idea how long a feet is, but Fahrenheit is complete non-intuitive clusterfuck because of the two operations necessary.
Celsius is at least easily convertible to Kelvin (by just shifting the zero point).
Fahrenheit is better for weather temperatures because you don't even need the last digit. The range of 10 degrees is precise enough that you know how to dress for it to stay comfortable, whether to bring supplies and what kind to deal with heat/cold, etc. That's the only thing I can think of where it outperforms Celsius, though.