> But in electricity/electronics, we deal with the entire range of metric prefixes… terabytes, nanofarads, gigaohms, microseconds
But you don't. You'll almost never use whole Farads, for example. It's even on the Wikipedia page: related units, nF, uF.
> Care to share some examples?
I don't really mind the difference between giga/mega/kilo. I was really just talking about a ballpark where we don't want the biggest thing ever to be unity in our everyday unit.
You do raise a valid point with height. This is because the gravitational field in some sense makes length directional: 3km up is very different to 3km along. Clearly, we need some vector based measures so we could scale them sensibly, g-hat and x-hat : ).
Can you think of many man made structures who have just one of some extensive property in an everyday unit?