Whoa, that’s such big news, i just shifted a rontometer in my seat.
Imagine confusing ronto and ronna and accidentally shifting a ronnameter instead :P
Damn, I was really holding out for Hella for 10^27
Alas, the prefix H was already in use according to the page you linked. Disappointing.
I don’t think it’s used as a prefix but as a unit symbol. Point still stands though, unfortunately.
Maybe there can be an exception when referring to Californium
The campaign hasn’t made any progress since 2011 when Wolfram Alpha added support for it, a year after Google did. Google’s calculator still does support it, though, so you can write queries like like “1Zbit/s * 1 year in hellabytes” (3.9 hellabytes), or “mass of the earth in hellagrams” (5.9 hellagrams).
If 1027 would be Hella, would 10-27 then be Hello? 🙃
Urgh. Batter not.
deleted by creator
10-30 quesito
Ohhh, síiii
10^32… Chilito
Yes! Yes baby yes!
Yes 2025 will be great year.
Fun fact: in metric you don’t get as much shrinkage
You can combine these to have perfectly valid ways of saying 1.
I’ll have ronnaronto cheeseburger.
Glory to the metric system 🫡🇫🇷
Bah, Imperial Units all the way. How else would I know how many stone I weigh, or how many King’s Pubes I am tall? I don’t want to convert from kilometers (whatever those are!) to gentlemans-strides or shilling miles to get where I’m going.
My favorite prefix will always be exa. Mostly because of a sci-fi book where one character called himself Exa and there were a few subtle puns with that name (like getting obliterated with a 10^18 W laser)
KEKto
Now we just need the cunni - 10⁶⁹
nice
I do like to sleep in
“What the hell are you kids doing down there in the basement, that you need these more specific units?”
“Um… nothing, sir. Everything is quite all right, quite all right.”
“Hrumph! Very well then, I shall be in my study. And do try to keep the bloody racket down, for chrissakes!”
“Yes sir, thank you sir, goodnight sir… Whew… that was a close one!”I’m hella disappointed
Lets define here and now Hella (H) as 10^666. It’s not SI official, but not “false”.
1/R = r
lovely