From: Andrew Usher on
Bob Myers wrote:

> > Drills already have interchangeable bits,
>
> Ah, another person who's never seen the inside of
> a machine shop...

OK, perhaps I didn't use the right terminology; I used that which I am
familiar. Nevertheless, my point stands that you don't normally need a
different machine for each different size of drilling.

And honestly you must know that.

Andrew Usher
From: Andrew Usher on
Darwin123 wrote:

>
> > The truth is, the leftist machine has gotten people's minds to feel
> > sorry for our measuring system, just like they've gotten white men to
> > feel sorry for being white and male.
>
> Your metaphors are gang raping the English language.

My assertion is not a metaphor here. It's entirely literal: Americans
now feel they must apologise for having a 'backward' system of
measure.

Andrew Usher
From: Andrew Usher on
Darwin123 wrote:

> Your metaphors are gang raping the English language.

Besides writing that garbage, you snipped all my actual points,
indicating that you have no defence.

Andrew Usher
From: jmfbahciv on
Mark Borgerson wrote:
> In article <hl162u0173l(a)news4.newsguy.com>, jmfbahciv(a)aol says...
>> Bob Myers wrote:
>>> jmfbahciv wrote:
>>>> Bob Myers wrote:
>>>>> Darwin123 wrote:
>>>>>> How about removing all regulations concerning units and see what
>>>>>> individuals and companies would do?
>>>>> That's the most sensible solution I've seen here yet - which,
>>>>> of course, is why it will probably never happen!
>>>>>
>>>> The only reason you are able to read these posts is because
>>>> we introduced and developed standards. don't throw the
>>>> bath water out with the babies.
>>> While (as noted earlier) my original comment was at least
>>> half in jest, I am prompted to ask re this one: who is this
>>> "we" you're talking about?
>> People who wrote the code to make the hardware work.
>>
>>> Many - probably most - of the
>>> most successful standards in use today were developed by
>>> industry groups responding to market needs, not through
>>> government regulation.
>> The government regulation happened after the standards
>> were made. This is what creates unique standards rather
>> than forcing the buyers of the products to choose between
>> a dozen, or dozens, of standards.
>>
>>> I've spent more than my fair share of time working in such
>>> groups, and would MUCH rather deal with industry
>>> standardization efforts than government or quasi-governmental
>>> regulation.
>>>
>> But the it's the governments' choices of which standard will
>> be used when deciding procurements. After that, the laws
>> about regulations happen if the industry isn't adept to
>> changing needs of the populace. A good example is
>> the telephone industry ;-). Another one is the airplane
>> business.
>>
> I think it will take something between a 60mm mortar and
> a 155mm howitzer shell to budge Andrew from his position!
> ;-)
>

Nope. Not even that. He doesn't like to learn from me; it's
against his religion.

/BAH
From: jmfbahciv on
J. Clarke wrote:
> Mark Borgerson wrote:
>> In article <hl162u0173l(a)news4.newsguy.com>, jmfbahciv(a)aol says...
>>> Bob Myers wrote:
>>>> jmfbahciv wrote:
>>>>> Bob Myers wrote:
>>>>>> Darwin123 wrote:
>>>>>>> How about removing all regulations concerning units and see
>>>>>>> what individuals and companies would do?
>>>>>> That's the most sensible solution I've seen here yet - which,
>>>>>> of course, is why it will probably never happen!
>>>>>>
>>>>> The only reason you are able to read these posts is because
>>>>> we introduced and developed standards. don't throw the
>>>>> bath water out with the babies.
>>>> While (as noted earlier) my original comment was at least
>>>> half in jest, I am prompted to ask re this one: who is this
>>>> "we" you're talking about?
>>> People who wrote the code to make the hardware work.
>>>
>>>> Many - probably most - of the
>>>> most successful standards in use today were developed by
>>>> industry groups responding to market needs, not through
>>>> government regulation.
>>> The government regulation happened after the standards
>>> were made. This is what creates unique standards rather
>>> than forcing the buyers of the products to choose between
>>> a dozen, or dozens, of standards.
>>>
>>>> I've spent more than my fair share of time working in such
>>>> groups, and would MUCH rather deal with industry
>>>> standardization efforts than government or quasi-governmental
>>>> regulation.
>>>>
>>> But the it's the governments' choices of which standard will
>>> be used when deciding procurements. After that, the laws
>>> about regulations happen if the industry isn't adept to
>>> changing needs of the populace. A good example is
>>> the telephone industry ;-). Another one is the airplane
>>> business.
>>>
>> I think it will take something between a 60mm mortar and
>> a 155mm howitzer shell to budge Andrew from his position!
>> ;-)
>
> 16 inch, for when you care enough to give only the very best.
>
>
ROTFL. I missed that one. Sorry, Mark.

/BAH