Disclaimer: of course, everything is a spectrum. To ADHD-people, caffeine has varying effects. Some get tired from it, others it affects less or not at all.

  • CyberEgg@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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    22 hours ago

    I’m from Europe. I use a 24h-clock but not military time. Military time is an anglophone thing I don’t care about since I’m not in the military. And frankly, I don’t care much about how Australians or US-Americans or English people find my time and date formats or any other unit or measurement jarring, because you guys rarely agree on any kind of measurements, so I use metrics, a 24h-clock (maybe add an “o’clock” because it reads nicer to me) and dd.mm.yy(yy) instead of stones, pounds, feet or freedoms per square ketchup ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

      • CyberEgg@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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        22 hours ago

        We’re 100% metric btw.

        Canada, UK and USA aren’t, at least not in colloquial language. That’s what I mean. You post something in english and always meet someone from some anglophone country doing it differently. So I stopped caring.

        • waz@feddit.uk
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          18 hours ago

          So what’s wrong with kg for weighing things, st & lb for people, miles for driving distance, metres for building things, C for temperature and feet for ascent of hills and stuff? That’s what a 70’s born UK kid thinks like. So 16:15 is said out loud, quarter past four, maybe rarely 1615, but never 16 o’clock and? No. O’clock is only on the hour. If it’s got bits on the end you say everything except the ‘o’clock’ But I love what you’ve done with ‘half-four’ to mean 3.30. I really enjoy doing that with my German colleagues.

          • CyberEgg@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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            17 hours ago

            So what’s wrong with kg for weighing things, st & lb for people, miles for driving distance, metres for building things, C for temperature and feet for ascent of hills and stuff?

            What’s right about it?

            But I love what you’ve done with ‘half-four’ to mean 3.30. I really enjoy doing that with my German colleagues.

            That’s not exclusively german though as germanic languages in general and some slavic languages use this format.