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em3rgent0rdr 2 days ago

> For some reason, the bel — again, what started as a sensible 10× increment — was soon deemed too big to use. I don’t quite know why: in other aspects of life, decimal notation suits us just fine.

Decimal notation can be a tad cumbersome to write and speak. Meanwhile, decibel usage commonly results in nice simple numbers that range between 0 and 100, with the fractional digits often being too insignificant to say out loud. For instance, the dynamic range of 16-bit audio (which is generally all the range that our ears care about) is 96 dB, while volume increments smaller than 1 dB aren't really noticeable, so decibel makes it easy to communicate volume levels without saying "point" or writing a "." or breaking out exponential notation. Even in fields other than audio the common ranges also conveniently will be around 1 dB for being on the verge of significance to around 100 dB or 200 dB for the upper range. (Also the whole power vs root-power caveat is simply something users of dB have to be cognizant of because we need to stick with one or the other to make consistent comparisons, and at the end of the day physical things hapen with power.) So while decibels may seem ridiculous, they actually are quite convenient for dealing with logarithmically-varying numbers in convient range from 1 dB to around 100 dB or so in many engineering fields.

em3rgent0rdr 2 days ago | parent [-]

Its like why we use percent from 0% to 100% instead of speaking of ratios from 0 point something to 1.