• @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    … People would be more likely to know the area of their home/floors vs the total volume…

    When’s the last time you saw a real estate ad with cubic inches/feet/meters on it?

    This makes perfect sense.

      • @[email protected]
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        6 months ago

        Wrong. People assume metric ceilings. The area in question is also measured in metric.

      • @EtherWhack
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        6 months ago

        A router would be different though. It would keep the same radius regardless of building geometry as it’s signal degrades with physical distance from its antenna.

        A dehumidifier works by running air through it and removing moisture then exhausting the now dry air out. The dry air would then intermix back into the room’s air, lowering it’s total humidity level. It may take a little more time based on the turbidity of the rooms air, but a dehumidifier would have the capacity to dry a .25x20x24m the same as a 3x5x8m room as both contain the same amount of air in their 120m³.

        Edit: added units

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    You see this on a lot of products. This is because a lot of people simply don’t understand how cubic meters work, or need to think about it where they know pretty much how much floorspace they have. And in practice it doesn’t matter, most people have ceilings somewhere around 2.5 meters and these indicators aren’t that precise anyways.

    • @[email protected]
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      136 months ago

      I might be wrong but I assumed it’s perfectly obvious to OP and it’s the kind of joke where something is funny because you stretch the meaning to read it literally. I chuckled actually, despite it making perfect sense.

    • @[email protected]
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      66 months ago

      You had a great post going until you screwed it all up by saying ceilings were only 2m high.

        • @SchmidtGenetics
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          6 months ago

          But it does matter… someone with vaulted ceilings at 12’ instead of 8’ would have this be 50% as efficient, which is huge.

          The fact that you blundered the only important piece of information is ironic as shit since it absolutely matters….

    • @SchmidtGenetics
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      56 months ago

      How does that work when a standard door is 2.1m tall?

      • @[email protected]
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        206 months ago

        Anyone who has ever done anything related to doors knows, there is no such thing as a standard door.

        • Bakkoda
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          6 months ago

          My wife: We don’t need to replace the door frame just the door

          Me crosscutting and ripping my new door to fit the old frame: Great idea honey

          • @SchmidtGenetics
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            06 months ago

            That’s usually from the previous home owner who thought they could install the previous door themselves and not knowing the difference between a rough opening and finished opening.

        • @SchmidtGenetics
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          6 months ago

          There is absolutely a minimum size that doors need to be for almost any house. Yes you can incorrectly install other doors, but codes provide a minimum size for professionals to follow when installing. Which is 2.1m in most of the world. Other places will have their own standard size door, but yes every country absolutely has standard door sizes.

          Why do you claim otherwise…? Just go look up any big box store door catalog lmfao, plenty of standard door options for even home owners. If you’re cutting a door to size, you’ve done fucked up in almost every case.

          And it’s funny you say something like this while being completely off base about story heights… fucking lmfao. Sure we should listen to your “expertise” hahahah, you don’t even know how tall a room is, yet we should trust you know anything about doors? Really? Seriously… dude?

      • gregorum
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        36 months ago

        Most ceilings are a foot and a half or more above the door

  • @[email protected]
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    136 months ago

    Let’s just say every device advertising it could work on X meters (square, cubic, whatever) is a lie.

    What are the conditions? How pronounced you expect your result to be?

    This is especially funny with heaters, for example, when heaters of the same power advertise vastly different area of effect and people go “Oh! This 1500W heater can heat up 50 square meters, so much better than this 2000W heater advertised for 30 square meters!”

  • @Pappabosley
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    116 months ago

    So I would be best installing it at my nose height?

    • @BluesF
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      36 months ago

      For best results buy one per family member per floor. Actually better get two so you can have one at seated height too.

      • @Venat0r
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        26 months ago

        Nah the air isn’t constrained to the plane so most of it should pass through eventually and get purified, maybe use some fans to speed it up if needed.

  • @Aceticon
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    6 months ago

    Obviously it works up to minus and plus infinity on one of the axes, possibly the Z-axis, though that’s not guaranteed (maybe it’s a longitudinal or latitudinal moisture remover?)

    • @[email protected]
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      36 months ago

      Nah, it’s the surface area of the extent of the effect. (For greatest volume affected, suspend the device such that its effect can reach, unimpeded, a sphere with that surface area.) Dunno how the physics works; something-something Gauss’s law, I imagine.

      • @Aceticon
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        6 months ago

        That’s actually a proper non-joky perfectly valid and scientific way to justify listing a covered area in square meters rather than volume.

        I doubt that’s the actual geometry they used and the surface whose area they list, but none the less it’s still well spotted.

  • @Adalast
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    36 months ago

    Omg, my wife and I were looking at air purifiers a couple months ago and I had this exact meltdown.