• @Beryl
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    7 months ago

    There’s a typo in the title. If you go back to the original source (in french), they actually retain 79,5 % of their original efficiency, so even better than the article’s title would have you believe.

      • @Whitebrow
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        557 months ago

        People seem to be angry at you for not knowing how the French count. My condolences. I found it funny tho. Have un upvote

        • @[email protected]
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          567 months ago

          Well, I DO know how the French count and compared to English it IS highly confusing. You can hardly convince me that saying “Four times twenty and ten” is as straight forward as saying “Nine tens”.

          And just to be clear: I’m not some Yankee or Brit with a superiority complex, no, I am German, and we have our own shitty version of this: Instead of moving along the digits from highest to lowest, as in “Four hundreds and two tens and nine”, we do “Four hundred and nine and two tens”.

          • @AA5B
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            427 months ago

            Wow, it’s like US uses metric system for counting and y’all do “imperial counting”

          • @Beryl
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            7 months ago

            deleted by creator

            • @[email protected]
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              77 months ago

              But Basque isnt an Indo-European language its a Paleo-European isolate. Cultural mixing not with standing.

          • @[email protected]
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            27 months ago

            Instead of moving along the digits from highest to lowest, as in “Four hundreds and two tens and nine”, we do “Four hundred and nine and two tens”.

            English is less consistent, going from nine-teen to twenty-one. German stays consistent with its lower two digits.

            • @[email protected]
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              87 months ago

              From 11 to 19 is always kind of weird in many languages. In Italian you go from essentially saying “one-ten” “two-ten”…“six-ten” to “ten-seven” “ten-eight” “ten-nine”. Then it goes in like in English. Why? No reason ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

          • @[email protected]
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            7 months ago

            The dude was saying people are angry at you because they don’t understand, not that you dont understand.

        • @Valmond
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          7 months ago

          Soixante-quinze virgule neuf vs soixante-dix-neuf virgule cinq.

          Easy peasy!

          Edit: it wasn’t easy peasy.

      • @Beryl
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        7 months ago

        It supposedly comes from originaly counting in base 20 ( a.k.a : vigesimal system) in some proto-european language. There are traces of it in breton, albanese, basque and danish for example. Even in english, there is a reminiscence of vigesimal, in the “score”, see for example Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address which famously starts with : “Fourscore and seven years ago…”, meaning 87 years ago.

        • @[email protected]
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          7 months ago

          As a frenchman who always found quatre-vingt weird but never bothered to find out why, thanks :)

          • @Beryl
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            37 months ago

            Mais je t’en prie :)

        • @perviouslyiner
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          17 months ago

          In English is this why we say fifteen instead of tentyfive?

      • @[email protected]
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        57 months ago

        No you can’t, because the source has written it in the usual hindu-arabic numerals as 79,5 and not as “soixante-dix-neuf virgule cinq”, you don’t need to pronounce the numerals to copy them.

    • Kairos
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      57 months ago

      Yes but is that the average panel, oraverage of still a working panels?

    • @[email protected]
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      7 months ago

      Careful using the word efficiency there, as it has a different meaning when talking about solar panels - it indicates how much energy the panel can extract from the light hitting it. The best modern panels you can buy are below 25% efficient, and since these are from the 90s they were probably about half that when new.