Vhane said:For twenty years now I've been hearing how metric will be the way of the future, it doesn't seem to be happening
I work in structural engineering. Our company does a lot of business with the states. A good amount of our jobs are on the federal level. All US federal jobs are in metric. The problem with this is that a lot of the US architectural and engineering companies do the jobs in imperial and then convert it in to metric. Why they don't just bother learning metric I don't know. It makes it a pain in the ass for us to go back and forth. We end up having to put both metric and imperiel dimensions on our drawings just to satisfy everyone.Vhane said:For twenty years now I've been hearing how metric will be the way of the future, it doesn't seem to be happening, but hey I'm from the US and thusly I prefer feet, pounds and all that other standard (imperial) goodness.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.