yono1986
yono1986 t1_jad2tum wrote
Reply to comment by jttm80 in ELI5: How does professional boxing scoring work? by [deleted]
Pretty much. But judges generally will stop at 10-7 because otherwise the fight becomes absolutely unwinnable for the other side.
yono1986 t1_jabidg1 wrote
Reply to ELI5: Only the top layer of water freezes in a lake because this layer insulates the rest of the water but the water in a trough in a freezer freezes all the way through. Why? by gud_doggo
Depth and quantity of water. Relative to a trough or bucket, a lake is huge. If it's cold enough to freeze a lake down 18 inches, a 12-in tall bucket will freeze solid, while the 20 ft deep lake will not.
yono1986 t1_jabhzg2 wrote
Boxing is scored by the 10 must system. In a typical round, a judge gives whoever they think won the round 10 points and the loser gets nine. If somebody gets knocked down, then it is generally 10-8 against them. Every once in a while you will have 10-7 rounds, but you have to be truly awful to get that score.
yono1986 t1_jabh64w wrote
Reply to Eli5: When/How did the world realize that it wasn’t the same time everywhere? by Ice_Ice_Fetus
Before time zones, there was local time. Essentially, whenever the sun at its highest point in the sky is noon. This was particularly difficult for rail travel, because a town that is a few dozen miles away has a slightly different local time, and you can't set a train schedule unless everyone agrees what time is when. Trains also move fast enough that you can notice time zones. Horse and foot travel are too slow for this. The other big thing was the telegraph. With telegraphs, you can now communicate with people who are clearly experiencing a different time.
yono1986 t1_jae82d1 wrote
Reply to ELI5: why do insurance rates go up? by Upper_Fig3303
Insurance is risk protection. To use the example of a car, the risks including crashes, being stolen, and having a tree fall on it. You pay some money each month (your premium) and in return if one of the risks happens the company pays you. You are betting against yourself and the insurance company is taking the other side of that bet. Your rates going up is a sign that there is greater risk associated with you now. It could be additional cars, younger drivers with access to the car, or a history of accidents. Any of these things creates an additional likelihood of a risk happening, and the higher premium is a reflection of that greater risk.