@amin @sotolf @dm @roguefoam

I meant for winter.

23/26 in summer (home/away), 18/22/20 in winter (away/home/asleep)

@rl_dane @amin @dm @roguefoam you sleep that warm? I usually turn off all heat in the room when sleeping, so I'm often down to single degree temperatures hen sleeping, I sleep better when the room isn't warm for some reason.

@sotolf @amin @dm @roguefoam

That (65°F) is a pretty cold sleeper for Texas.

@rl_dane @amin @dm @roguefoam 20 in winter is cold?

@sotolf @rl_dane @dm @roguefoam

I honestly have no idea what people here set their thermostats to; everything is in Freedom Units™©®.

@amin @sotolf @dm @roguefoam

Fahrenheit is the only imperial unit I'm a fan of. I think it's just a more sensible scale for temperatures within the range that humans experience.

For anything scientific/engineering, Celcius and Kelvin all the way.

@rl_dane @sotolf @dm @roguefoam

Why, though? The "32 as freezing" thing just makes zero sense.

With Celcius 0 is freezing and 100 is boiling, the two temperatures that are typically the ones that matter the most to humans. ;)

@amin @sotolf @dm @roguefoam

Because 0 is heckin' cold and 100 is heckin' hot.

In Celcius, 0 is pretty cold, and 100 is DEAD, EVER SO DEAD.

I think Fahrenheit makes much more sense for climate-related applications.

@rl_dane @amin @sotolf @dm @roguefoam but even the degrees (hah) of the scale make no sense. Y’all mostly seem to be using only dekafahrenheit or pentafahrenheit, so you can just get rid of that stupid ⁹⁄₅ factor and the constant offset.