… b*tch!
You can combine these to have perfectly valid ways of saying 1.
I’ll have ronnaronto cheeseburger.
“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!”Klaatu, verata, nikto
…necktie? Nickel?
Great, now I can talk about lightyears using Fermi length as unit
I’m switching my digital calipers to quetta-planck lengths.
Fun fact: in metric you don’t get as much shrinkage
10-30 quesito
Ohhh, síiii
10^32… Chilito
Yes! Yes baby yes!
Actually, it’s not ronnabyte, it’s ribibyte …
RiB
You gotta lick a frog or two to understand kibimibi.
1/R = r
lovely
Now we just need the cunni - 10⁶⁹
nice
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
Ronna and ronto: disgusting
Quetta and quecto: pleasing
I’m hella disappointed
Lets define here and now Hella (H) as 10^666. It’s not SI official, but not “false”.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_prefix
In case you wondered where they came in the list like I immediately did:
- quetta Q 10^30
- ronna R 10^27
- yotta Y 10^24
- zetta Z 10^21
- exa E 10^18
- peta P 10^15
- tera T 10^12
- giga G 10^9
- mega M 10^6
- kilo k 10^3
- hecto h 10^2
- deca da 10^1
- ——
- deci d 10^−1
- centi c 10^−2
- milli m 10^−3
- micro μ 10^−6
- nano n 10^−9
- pico p 10^−12
- femto f 10^p−15
- atto a 10^−18
- zepto z 10^−21
- yocto y 10^−24
- ronto r 10^−27
- quecto q 10^−30
I’m going to start giving my height in quectometres
I noticed recently that a Linux command mentioned in its manpage that it supported Q as a bit prefix and I had to stop to ponder the utility in encoding a million-billion Terabytes.
But did they mean Quettabytes or Quebibytes? Because the difference is only around 250 000 times the size of the Internet.
Or, in other words, around 244 kibiInternets.
Bah, that’s just a rounding error!
Googol 10^100.
(Not sure if that’s official prefix.)
As far as I remember it isn’t, it’s just a named specific large number, like Avogadro’s number or Graham’s number.
Fun fact: they made these because Cookie Clicker needed them
Cookie Clicker doesn’t use SI prefixes. It just uses numbers (eg million, billion, octodecillion, etc…), which already extend into basically infinity I believe.