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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Tuesday, 24 April 2018 13:33:01 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote:
On Tue, 24 Apr 2018 13:05:34 +0100, Steve Walker wrote: On 24/04/2018 12:39, charles wrote: In article , NY wrote: "Brian Gaff" wrote in message news ![]() matter which. You know you should get out more! "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() time. Can someone explain to me why most right handed folk put their watch on their left hand? The normal convention is to wear a wris****ch on the opposite hand to the one you write with - maybe so you can look at the time while you are writing, or else so it is less likely to be damaged when doing tasks with the dominant (writing) hand. Because the winder is on the right of the watch, this makes it more difficult to wind a conventional watch if it is worn on the right wrist and wound with the left, so left-handed watches used to exist in the days when all watches were clockwork and had to be wound frequently, but mostly, left-handed people (like my mum) had to remove the watch to wind it. Now we've dealt with that one, how about the question of whether the face should be uppermost when the palms are laid on a desk, or downwards facing the desk on the pulse-taking side of the wrist. Of course, the use of watches is declining. People tend to rely on their mobile phone these days. I feel lost without a watch, even when I have my phone to hand. Plus I can glance at it at any time, without having to retrieve it from my pocket and turn screen on. Indeed. And who carries their phone everywhere they go? I leave mine at home unless I'm going on a long trip somewhere and think I might need to call Green Flag or tell my relative I'll be delayed in traffic. A phone in a pocket falls out when you sit down, and in a car that can mean unbolting the seat to access it. I wonder how many pound coins scrapyards retrieve from scrapped cars? I must lose a fortune down the side of my car seat. Plus the battery is unlikely to go flat for the next 18 months or so. Mine lasted 6 months, but then it has an altimeter and barometer on it which use a lot of power. Why did yuo feel the need to get one with an altimeter ? Do yuo often need to know what height you are at say when drinking a pint sorry taking sips. Maybe it's all part of your problem of hitting your head on low things. -- Why do people hit things when they don't work? It worked with the slaves |
#2
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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"whisky-dave" wrote in message
... Mine lasted 6 months, but then it has an altimeter and barometer on it which use a lot of power. Why did yuo feel the need to get one with an altimeter ? Do yuo often need to know what height you are at say when drinking a pint sorry taking sips. Maybe it's all part of your problem of hitting your head on low things. An altimeter is a standard part of a GPS receiver which most phones have: they give 3D coordinates as lat/long/alt. But if your phone also has a barometer then the phone *may* be getting its altitude reading from that, though it will need to be corrected for changes in barometric pressure, as for an aeroplane altimeter. |
#3
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On Tuesday, 24 April 2018 14:28:22 UTC+1, NY wrote:
"whisky-dave" wrote in message ... Mine lasted 6 months, but then it has an altimeter and barometer on it which use a lot of power. Why did yuo feel the need to get one with an altimeter ? Do yuo often need to know what height you are at say when drinking a pint sorry taking sips. Maybe it's all part of your problem of hitting your head on low things. An altimeter is a standard part of a GPS receiver which most phones have: I believe he wears a watch on his wrist not a phone. We aren't talking about phones. It's just that he seems to accept a limited 6 month battery life on the watch in exchange for an altimeter and barometer. He hasn't said whether his watch has GPS I doubt it does otherwise he'd mentioned the usefulness of having GPS for mapping purposes. they give 3D coordinates as lat/long/alt. But if your phone also has a barometer then the phone *may* be getting its altitude reading from that, though it will need to be corrected for changes in barometric pressure, as for an aeroplane altimeter. |
#4
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Tue, 24 Apr 2018 06:04:25 -0700 (PDT), whisky-dave, the notorious
troll-feeding idiot, blabbered: Why did yuo feel the need to get one with an altimeter ? Why do you feel the need to keep feeding this abysmally stupid sociopathic sow, you troll-feeding idiot! Could it be you are as abysmally stupid as that mentally handicapped Scot? |
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