Installera Steam
logga in
|
språk
简体中文 (förenklad kinesiska)
繁體中文 (traditionell kinesiska)
日本語 (japanska)
한국어 (koreanska)
ไทย (thailändska)
Български (bulgariska)
Čeština (tjeckiska)
Dansk (danska)
Deutsch (tyska)
English (engelska)
Español – España (spanska – Spanien)
Español – Latinoamérica (spanska – Latinamerika)
Ελληνικά (grekiska)
Français (franska)
Italiano (italienska)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonesiska)
Magyar (ungerska)
Nederlands (nederländska)
Norsk (norska)
Polski (polska)
Português (portugisiska – Portugal)
Português – Brasil (portugisiska – Brasilien)
Română (rumänska)
Русский (ryska)
Suomi (finska)
Türkçe (turkiska)
Tiếng Việt (vietnamesiska)
Українська (ukrainska)
Rapportera problem med översättningen
i like to think of it as names are variables that represent a meaning or definition, weather it be an exact number, or the contents of a book. :)
tl:dr
meter = a variable/name with a definition of distance between a and b
meter irl = a name of a definitive distance between a and b
therefore, it's accurate.
The reason why the speedometer is consistent is because it's simple math. There *is* a fixed distance you cover in any given real world period of time, but there'll be some kind of internal conversion with regards to distance to producec a 'kilometer' value that makes any kind of sense.
All that the speeds and distances have to be is relative to each other, and not relative to real world speed and distance covered.