FluffyCowBird ✅ · @FluffyCowBird
300 followers · 255 posts · Server infosec.exchange

@es @briankrebs

British maths is (are?) different from US math in regard to such numbers, as are Spanish numbers. In Spanish, we say the equivalent of "thousand million" where it would be "billion" in the US.

In Spanish, "un billón" would be what we would call "a trillion". The difference is in how we distinguish the "levels" of -illions. This is the difference between the "long scale" and the "short scale" for numbers greater than 1,000,000. In the US, we use the "short scale".

In the US, I think most of us picture it like this: million, then billion, then trillion, etc., all follow each other in a sequence, with each having three more zeros then the previous one.

In many other countries, million is followed by thousand million, and THEN billion, then thousand billion, THEN trillion, etc. In other words, "un billón" is "a million millions", if that makes sense.

It's super interesting (to me) to note this kind of funky cultural micro-difference that is so easily overlooked until one day it hits you in the face.

Also, for the levels between the -illions in communities that use the "long scale", they often name the thousand-million type numbers using the same root, but different endings, with -illiard instead of -illion. So, million, then milliard, billion, then billiard, trillion, then trilliard, etc., if you didn't want to say "thousand million" and such.

And no... I just looked it up, and I'm sorry to say: this is NOT where the name for the game "billiards" comes from! :ablobcatmaracasevil:​

Sources:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_and
etymonline.com/search?q=billia

#spanishteacherfacts #denada #longscale #shortscale #mathsnotgross

Last updated 2 years ago

🐙 morpheo :fuck_verify: 🐙 · @morpheo
331 followers · 4357 posts · Server kolektiva.social

In Sweden we don't say one billion for a thousand millions (well, we more and more mistakenly do, even in the media); we say "en miljard"—Which used to be the proper (long scale) way to say it: A milliard... everywhere. But somehow the English-speaking parts of the world seem to have adapted to the americanised way of saying it (short scale).

Now. I have no qualms with change per se, mind you, but this one is just plain dumb; long scale is perfectly logical, and much more than the current alternative. (I'll not go in to metric prefix here, since that's obviously superior (; )

* A billiion is simply a million squared: 1000000^2 <-See that number two? Thats the bi in billion.
* A trillion? That's a million cubed: 1000000^3 <- three as in cubed.
* A quadrillion: 1000000^4 <- four, as in quad.
* Quintillion: 1000000^5
...etc, ad nauseam.

Why would we trade a simple, logical solution for something... very much less so?

Ah well. You made me do it. I ranted. Happy holidays, I guess? (:

Link: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_and

#actually #maths #petpeeve #rant #shortscale #longscale

Last updated 2 years ago

· @thaedeus
11 followers · 29 posts · Server sfba.social

This Laguna is the one I used on FDF's 6th album, Wake Up! which you can find here: fdf-music.bandcamp.com/album/w

#shortscale #guitar

Last updated 2 years ago

Simon Campbell · @simoncampbell
29 followers · 79 posts · Server mastodon.art