• @ulterno
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    06 months ago

    ISO and while we’re at it, the NATO phonetic alphabet for English speakers. “A as in apple B as in boy” means fuck all when you’re grasping for any word that starts with that letter, and if English isn’t your first language fuckin forget about it.

    err… didn’t get what you’re trying to say

      • @ulterno
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        6 months ago

        I’m pretty sure that’s an example of why you should use the chosen ones instead of going “mancy/nancy” all over the place.

        Also, didn’t they just make a standard for themselves and other just took it because it was probably easier than making one for their own language (oh right, NATO… but let’s be honest here, NATO is just a forum for America to flaunt its power while PR-ing peaceful, so it makes sense they use English, which is also easier to be a second language than most other ones).
        Though I feel like China might have made their own.

        Anti Commercial-AI license

    • @ulterno
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      6 months ago

      The radio words were chosen to be distinct, such that for people who trained in them, it would be easier to distinguish letters being spoken over low quality radio.

      Not very relevant in the era of 2G HD audio, and now VoLTE.
      But when there’s a bad signal and you have to tell someone a callsign, it makes sense.


      I like ISO, because in whatever cases I have interacted with it, it has made programming easier for me.

      I like YYYY-MM-DD, because when files lose their metadata, if they are named using this, I can still sort by name and get results by date.

      Anti Commercial-AI license