You SW guys get away with murder

but as I recall they used metric and imperial calculations for the mirror alignment which was why they had to send the shuttle out to fix it, regardless it is so much easier to count in units of ten.
As a simple carpenter I was very unimpressed to see that in the union they actually used building blocks to help apprentices learn imperial and 16th's rather than saying 20 feet 7 inches and "one little mark"
It fun playing blame the s/w, I work with a bunch of mechanical engineers that like the same game. Lucky, I don't have to rely on a faulty human memory (which are less reliable than Windoze on a bad day) and can use the search button. See below. I enjoy popcorn, want to share


. All I know about carpentry is the old adage, measure once and beat in to place.
Side note: Since I am a geek, I think in hex, not 10ths. So thinking in 10th does not help me.
Do a search for hubble teescope problems, borrowed from From Wikipedia...
A commission headed by
Lew Allen, director of the
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, was established to determine how the error could have arisen. The Allen Commission found that the main
null corrector, a device used to measure the exact shape of the mirror, had been incorrectly assembled—one lens was wrongly spaced by 1.3 mm.
[49] During the polishing of the mirror, Perkin-Elmer had analyzed its surface with two other null correctors, both of which correctly indicated that the mirror was suffering from
spherical aberration. The company ignored these test results as it believed that the two null correctors were less accurate than the primary device that was reporting that the mirror was perfectly figured.
[50]