The Next Three Days are the x86 Days
Pinky wrote in to note that "Today, tomorrow and the next day are the only days we'll get dates like this:
2/8/6
3/8/6
4/8/6
like the x86 computers :-)" And yes folks, in the August news cycle vortex, even this strikes my fancy. In recent years we've seen numerical giants like 3/1/4, 6/6/6 and 1/2/3, but now really, what do any of us have to look forward to? Is our future dull and meaningless without cool numbers in dates? Oh the humanity of it all ...
In Canada, where m/d/y is more common we already experienced this on February 8, March 8 and April 8, respectively.
Life is good living three steps ahead of the taco.
Personally I look forward to the lucky 7's, 7/7/7, a day where CmdrTaco and I can celebrate our slot machine winnings together.
This is either a very slow news day, or the OP is way too bored.
If you think education is expensive, you should try ignorance -- Derek Bok, president of Harvard
Where's the link to an article? Oh, this was just some guy rambling about something while high.
Apology to Ubuntu forum.
"today, tomorrow and the next day are the only days we'll get dates like this: 2/8/6 3/8/6 4/8/6 like the x86 computers :-)"
That all depends on your locale settings - other people had thier x86 days several months back
At some point, somewhere, the entire internet will be found to be illegal.
Instead of getting dates of their own, Saturday and subsequent days will be known as "Pentium", "Pentium II", "Pentium IV", "Pentium 5", "Pentium 6", and of course "Xeon".
Like the USA? I thought Slashdot was unappologetically US centric.
(insert "We don't use dates like that, you insensitive clod" comment here)
Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
A real nerd uses a logical date format - yyyy/mm/dd. What kind of a date format puts the 1st of February before the 2nd of January when sorted?
Defcon starts Friday, 3/8/6. Coincidence?
- Aetheral Research -
We covered this story back then.
This is the obligatory dupe.
-- Thou hast strayed far from the path of the Avatar.
Abolish weird date formats!
by the way it will happen again in another 100 years. and who cares about MM/DD/YY ;-), only in america do you have everything backwards, the date, the side of the road you drive on, the light switches, the imperial system.
Get a life.
Take a vacation.
${YEAR+1} is going to be the year of Linux on the desktop!
Ummm... you mean this century right?
I'm still surprised this made the front page. I mean, I'm a geek, but even I think this is lame.
Falun Dafa is good!
11/11/11 It's the number eleven for Christ's sake!
I spend most of my time in bed, darling.
And for those people living in japan the dates passed in 2003, 2004 and 2005
thank God the internet isn't a human right.
The 80186 was also an Intel processor, wasn't it?
For those of us who partake of the ganja, we will always have 4/20 once a year. The man can't take that away from us! Ok, some little bastards in columbine tried, but it is still the national pot holiday no matter what they did on that day.
What about 2/8/8 (e Day)? Or 10/6/6 (Norman Conquest Day)? If pi gets a day, e should too.
3/14 of course
III.IIVIVIXIIVIVIIIVVIIIIXVIIIXIIIIIIIIVIIIIVVIII
Really 5/8/6 and 6/8/6 should be there, they were the designations on some of the "other brand" (then, amd and cyrix) CPUs, of course 8/08/6 should be noted too as should the year 4004... will anyone remember a humble lil adding machine then?
...
Please... any place that uses that date format doesn't have the attention span to celebrate three related dates each a month apart.
"There are more important things than stopping terrorism. Upholding the Constitution is one of them." - Ars Forumer.
Never mind 3/8/6, I'm still baked from celebrating 4/2/0 !
Will wank off Linus Torvalds for fame.
Because we like to write the way we talk. English speakers prefer to say July 7th instead of 7th of July.
England itself uses the more euro-centric dd/mm/yyyy format, for what thats worth. The only country I've heard use mm/dd/yyyy has been the US, although my experience certainly isn't comprehensive on the matter.
/6 was 2000 years ago, well before even the 8086 processors were released. Maybe in 6000 years, we can celebrate that anniversary. Even the Motorola 68000s seem a long way away on that scheme, never mind the Intel 80286.
I think MM/DD/YY comes from the English way of speaking dates, which would be August 2nd, 2006 (although 2nd of August, 2006 is an equally common longhand form).
Oh, and another peeve here - it's not 6, its 06 or 2006. The year
Actually, this is a dupe from way back in '86.
True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
I still remember 12:34 pm on May 6, 1978 as the best such thing of all time. It was 1234 on 5/6/78!
That's rich coming for a dutch person (if you are dutch!)! Dutch and Germans use this weird way for numbers. To say 86 (and thus stay on topic) you say in Dutch 6 and eighty. So for 286, you say two hundred six and eighty. If that's not confusing, what is? Oh yes, I know, the way Dutch and Germans say the time! for 5h30, you say "half six"!
Every culture has their idiosyncrasies.
I'll do it for cheesy poofs.
Except that tomorrow is 2006-08-02, followed by 2006-08-03 and 2006-08-04.
In this case one write and talk the same way: YYYY/MM/DD. And I'm sure there are plenty of other languages does that too.
Red Leader Standing By!
Everyone on /. knows the correct way to write the time and date: 1154526200
Intron: the portion of DNA which expresses nothing useful.
Thank god for this newsitem. I had been wondering the past few weeks why I visit Slashdot anyway.
Thaw me out for 8/02/86. Then freeze me again until the year 6502.
Sorry, but here in Europe, where the current calendar system was invented, we put the day first, so today is 2/8/6!
Please step away from the keyboard slowly. Go get a very stiff drink. Repeat often. Do not post on Slashdot until September.
the future is but past forgotten
Today we celebrate the Brighton 826 MetroBus.
Yes, I realize it has the route number 273 on it, but really it is the 826!
Let's all celebrate the wonders of mass transit!
He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
Obviously Slashdot needs this addition to the source:
Just think what can be added to Wikipedia's Slashdot entry! @.~
The i586 DOES exist. Same as the i686. I don't care what Intel marketing pushed down people's throats, I still call them 586 and 686 systems. So does the Linux kernel...
-"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
It's all well and good people saying the correct date format is yyyy-mm-dd, but how do people actually pronounce it?
I for one certainly don't say it's 2006, August the 2nd. I'd either say it's 2nd August 2006 or August 2nd 2006...
Summation 2
It's sad that these are the only kind of dates we have to look forward to :o(
Nuh-uh! They ran a story about this back in 6 too, but back then we were still pretty bummed about jesus' death, so we didn't really celebrate it much.
MM/DD/YYYY as a numeric representation makes no logical sense. DD/MM/YYYY is small/medium/large date units, whereas MM/DD/YYYY is medium/small/large. Who orders things by putting the smallest unit of measurement in the middle? Do you write your time as hh:ss:mm?
Personally I prefer YYYY-MM-DD - large/medium/small as the largest digit (e.g., the millenium) is to the left as well - makes organising/sorting documents using their name much easier.
"today, tomorrow and the next day are the only days we'll get dates like this: 2/8/6 3/8/6 4/8/6 like the x86 computers :-)"
Has Y2K taught you nothing? Using a single digit to store the year? You are among programmers! Hang your head in shame!
Modern copyright is theft of culture from everyone and it retards the progress of the useful arts and sciences.
My father is especially proud to be a member of the Class of 1961. His class ring reads the same right-side-up or upside-down!
The usual suspects note that the condition won't happen again until the Year of our Lord 6009 (that is, if man is still alive, if woman can survive...).
Stressed? Me? Of course not. Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.
>If you use a real date system, then this is 8/2/06
We do, you're the oddballs. Poxy 'mercans, always convinced their way is the only way.
I want a list of atrocities done in your name - Recoil
January 2nd, 2010 (01/02/2010) for Americans, February first for the rest of you. Last one was October 2, 2001 (10/02/2001) here - I threw a party (any excuse, really).
Poor means hoping the toothache goes away.
The human mind will always seek out patterns in the numbers. So no fear in a great abyss in cool number combinations. My upcoming favorites are (including the time of day): 12:34:56 7/8/9 and only a bit more than five years until 11:11:11 11/11/11
Jesus died when he was 6 / 7 years old? Really? (Yes I know Jesus wasn't born 1 AD, but neither did he die as early as 6 AD or even 6 BC.)
Why not fork?
Real Nerd? hardly, you've just reordered the numbers. Anyone can do that. We need it more obscure, nerder way of doing it. Check the following out:
Todays date is:
114415202
Plus, I think we should all just refer to all dates as a stardates.
Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
In all the sensible word, 'leet' day will be on the 13th of March, 2007.
You would have had it on the 33rd of January or the 3rd of the 13th calendar month... -if- they existed.
we can have 1/3/37
heh.
3/1/2104, 6/6/2106, and 1/2/2103. Humanity will be OK.
By your reasoning, the number which you are least likely to need, the century, shouldn't be used at all, right?
I'm waiting for next year where the unappreciated chips finally get there days.
387 and 487 chips were the bomb.
So okay, this is news?
Every year March 10th comes around and we don't get a bunch of news posts from Nintendo fans because it's MAR10 day yet again.
It can't be that slow on a Tuesday in August. What is the world coming to?
This is almost as exciting as the recent news of British Telecom cebrating traffic lights. Or yesterday, 8/2/06 (i.e. yesterday).
Currently theta testing the prototype "Event Horizon" server-scaled desktop box with a 50 Gigameg of Ram.
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
...next year, we'll get floating-point coprocessors!
tasks(723) drafts(105) languages(484) examples(29106)
..and what year, exactly, was Jesus born, according to your calendar?
You start out with the bottom bun. Then you put a smaller beef pattie on it. Last you place the top bun which is larger than either the bottom bun or the beef.
I guess we can blame Ray Kroc for our date conventions.
The greatest thing you'll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return.
Okay, you caught me. I was being a complete poser. I'm not a proper fan at all.... for shame.
11:23:58 13/21/34? Oh, wait, that's unpossible.
You are not the customer.
We can achieve greater pi on March 14th, 2015. (Only if you use the m/d/y format; the Brits won't get this day until January 3rd, 2415.)
There's also e day, on either January 7th or July 2nd in 2018, depending on which version you use.
And, of course, there's the rapture, or as I like to call it: i day.
12:34:56 pm on July 8, 1990, since it was 12:34:56 7/8/90. Now *that* was the best such thing of all time.
Beats the heck out my birthday: OJ was found "not guilty". Oh, and Germany was re-united, but I'm an American and we don't get much news from Asia.
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
yy? YY! It's because of people like you that we had the whole Y2k issue. It wasn't because computers didn't have space, it was because people are too explitive lazy to write out a 4 digit year, or even think in terms of 4 digit years.
I dislike numeric months because you never know if the person is using day/month or month/day. 144 days out of the year are ambiguous because of this. Unfortunately we're also in the middle of 12 years where the (<shudder>two digit</shudder>) year number can be confused for a day number or a month number.
I personally use dd-MON-yyyy, ie 02-AUG-2006. It's nice, and completely unambiguous. <psycho-rant> Unfortunately, the banking system in my beloved country is forcing me to use ddmmyyyy. Cheques now have pre-printed field indicators instead of a simple line. Screw them! I just won't use cheques anymore. HAHaHa! </psycho-rant>
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
"Eh, Sorry Pinky, but here in America, where these computers were born, we put the month first, so today is 8/2/6!"
Why do Americans think they invented everything? The computer was thought up by Babbage in the 1800s, and the first computer with electronic memory was invented at Manchester uni in 1948 and was called "The Baby" - although you could probably claim any nation had the first working computer depending how you define a computer right back to the Chinese/Babylonians with the abacus.
Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so. - Douglas Adams
Really? My wife is German, and there, they use *two* digits for the year, as in 2/8/06. (and sometimes, these days, four) I don't recall an Intel processor with that number.
"Money is truthful. If a man speaks of his honor, make him pay cash." Notebooks of Lazarus Long, Robert A. Heinlein
While this is fun and all that, in reality I don't know of anyone outside of the Slashdot community that would write the year as simply '6'. 99.99 percent of real people are going to write it as either '06' or '2006'.
I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
Those of us who prefer numerical dates to sort in chronological order already celebrated these chips in 2002, 2003 and 2004. Plus, we attended two-day festivals, ALU Day and FPU Day. You M/D/Y yokels have to wait another year for all three FPU Days? Crazy I say, but hey, whatever floats your boat.
Thank you, Edward Snowden.
"Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
I bought a freaking Sansa e250 (not to be confused with the non-freaking model) using my Best Buy gift cards, and it works under linux in MSC mode! w00t! w00t, w00t!
/. mods rejected the story, though. Also, Rockbox devel is beginning on the e200 series, which means someday I'll be all in Linux and 1337 again.
Nathan Curry's firt mp3 player guys, this is big. Bastard
It plays some video you can hardly see, but at 15fps max and ~200 x ~145 resolution, I can store massive quantities of pr0n. You know, if I ever have any trouble getting any, BECAUSE MY MP3 PLAYER'S SO F*&$#ING COOL IT'LL GET ME LAID AT THE DROP OF A HAT!!!1111!!!111111./1/.111
Now all I need is an appropriately cool hat....
Please stop stalking me, bro.
No, the real nerd uses Binary 1000/100/110 (8/4/6) (and no, I didn't use Calc to figure that out.)
I can't wait until 1000/1000/1000 (8/8/8). It works the same in all time zones (OK, North Korea is just strange) and has to be one of the geekiest dates out there (1/1/1 was good too!).
If that freaks you, try French. 95 is "quatre-vingt-quinze", literally "four twenties (plus) fifteen". And let's not go into Roman numerals, though in the early years of the millennium they're nicely compact, in this year MMVI AD, compared to my birth year of MCMLVIII.
I look at it differently again, so perhaps we have to agree to disagree...
:)
2006/8/2 is I agree then "best" way to represent a date - The majority of human-use number systems put the least-significant information to the right hand side. This has the bonus that sorting on a computer (mechanical or electrical) is simplified. Systems that include this are HH:MM:SS and good 'ol decimal numbering Hundreds-Tens-Units.
An alternative in the LSB/MSB world is 2/8/2006 - Computers can be (and are) architected to deal with this type of reversal. Humans can deal with the LSB being at the left hand end of the information. This is still "useful" as processing left-to-right and right-to-left are not really that different. I consider this to be "next best" as it retains a certain amount of logic.
The final option is to ignore whether your data has an order or significance, and just jumble it up. How is MM/DD/YYYY differnt to YYYY/DD/MM ? Would you consider YYYY/DD/MM valid or useful? I am afraid that I personally would not, and but the same token consider MM/DD/YYYY to be not-useful. Perhaps we should just switch to MM/YYYY/DD for fun?
I would be seriously interested to know where/why the different system in the USA originated, and by what measure you determine the USA system to be next-best and the European system to be "Fucked up"
Enjoy Y2K? Roll-on Year 2037!
About the only case the month is put before the day in my (non-US) experience is when talking about "September 11"...
a world in progress...
You don't say whose military or government. The US DoD, at least, is large enough that there are multiple "standards". I've seen MM/DD/YY (08/02/06) and YYYY-MMM-DD (2006-AUG-02) most often, I think. The ISO date form is YYYY-MM-DD (2006-08-02) or YYYYMMDD (20060802).
Personally, I find the mixed number/letter forms like "2006 AUG 2" and "2 Aug 2006" work best when dealing with other humans who speak the same language. It's unambiguous -- there's only one sane way to interpret it -- and the letter/number distinction stands out more than dashes. For computers and other kinds of filing, though, the ISO form definately wins. It makes sorting so much easier.
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
We.ve had 3/4/5 but in the next few years we have a few more of the nice triangle numbers coming up. Not really computer related, but geeky.
If you aren't far left by the age of 18 you have no heart. If you aren't far right by 30 you have no brain.
You could celebrate 27/1/8 or 27/1/81 in Europe, or you could celebrate 2/7/18 in the US (for the non-math geeks, that refers to e). Again, in Europe, you could celebrate 31/4/15 and in the US you could celebrate 3/14/15. Quite frankly, except for dates like 6/6/6 or 7/7/7, you could have different celebrations for the same number on different continents and in many different combinations.
Actually, even in your way of saying it, the date is really either 2/8/06 or 2/8/2006, neither one of which would really rise to the level of deserving an article on /.!
"Money is truthful. If a man speaks of his honor, make him pay cash." Notebooks of Lazarus Long, Robert A. Heinlein
First computer was built by Turing and his associates at Bletchley Park, during WWII. It was classified for some time, so history books may not actually reflect this bit of trivia. It is a matter of debate, as others have claimed ENIAC was the first.
/^([Ss]ame [Bb]at (time, |channel.)){2}$/
I'm a Mac user, how long do I have to wait for 6/80/40?
Comment of the year
I've always appreciated 3/14. Especially since at university it meant free pie and ice cream at 1:59.
It doesn't matter where neither the calendar system nor the computer was invented. It's simply differing convention. If you want to get technical about which format Slashdot should use, it should probably be by where Slashdot servers are located, or where the site was founded. Or if we're a democracy, by which demographic makes up the larger portion of Slashdot visitors.
It was symlinked in the docs.
tasks(723) drafts(105) languages(484) examples(29106)
And also, the max length of the subject line is too short. Anyway, this is really a meaningless article and a waste of time. You can find significance in any numerical combination on the calendar if you try hard enough. There was no reason to put this article on the front page, and to put it in the "Funny" category is an insult to the concept of humor.
Regular Meta Moderators are not more likely to get mod points.
dates as numbers are interesting
Well, assuming you want to remain consistant with numbers, it still depends on how you look at it. Numbers are written with the most significant part first. Is the year really the most significant part of a date? Of course it can be if you are planning a long time ahead, but for day to day things, it probably is not. Also if you abbreviate a number you normally get rid of the last part, where as if you abbreviate a date you would often get rid of the year, and maybe even the month.
Another argument for not writing dates with the year first is that you will have to read it backwards to pronounce it. Or at least i would not say that today is 2006 August 2nd.
Of course the americans are not the only ones having weird pronounciation of things, in danish you would pronounce 1234 as "one thousand two hundred and four and thirty"
The trouble with 'AUG' or 'SEP' is that these make no sense in many languages, whereas the numbers translate well. YYYY-MM-DD makes the most sense. Most significant digits first, just as in the rest of our entire number system.
2006/8/2 is the only logical and correct format.
Close, but it doesn't sort alphabetically, and the / character has a double meaning on Unix systems and in URLs. 2006-08-02 is better, with the added bonus that it's part of the ISO standard.
Of course, it's harder to get interesting date numbers when you've got 8 digits to work with, two of them can't take many values and two or three more only change values very infrequently. 2011-11-02 20:11:11.02 is coming up, I guess.
Your nuts, the month always goes first and the year is 06 not 6.
10/10/10
After all that is 42 in binary.... What was the question?
Personally, I'm looking forward to the luckiest day of the century next year - 7/7/7 :) Works for both Americans and Europeans too.
--Aaron Greenberg
This always made more sense to me, and that is how I write dates shorthand for things like blog and journal(as in dead tree) entries.
"Empathise with stupidity, and you're halfway to thinking like an idiot." - Iain M. Banks
Never thought my geek card would be in danger, but what's the significance of 3/1/4?
sic transit gloria mundi
As a "crazy American" who has lived overseas, I get completely confused by this and never can remember how I am supposed to write it when I sign documents.
As for sorting in a list, I think dd/mm/yy would be really confusing, you'd end up with the following list:
10/11/03
11/11/01
12/11/06
13/11/97
Since I'm cunfused about how to write it anyway, on the computer, I write the date as yyyy/mm/dd, which will actually sort to a chronological list. It's confusing to others who see it, but it's my documents, so at worst it will confuse people who shouldn't be looking at them anyway.
Interesting side note about sorting on computers. Some OSes will actually ignore the leading 0 and treat the number as a whole number, while some don't. Compare the two following lists:
8.jpg
9.jpg
10.jpg
11.jpg
or
10.jpg
11.jpg
8.jpg
9.jpg
The second list is comparing only the first number while the first looks at the whole number and then compares it.
I suspect it is from the old manual/paper based days of business. You'd keep separate years in separate filing cabinets, so the year becomes irrelevant. Thus using month/day makes it a lot easier to sort.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
And for those people living in japan the dates passed in 2003, 2004 and 2005
My mother, having been born as a PoW of the Japanese in Singapore in 1942 has a birth certificate which is fairly rare. Written in English, on an official British Government-issued Birth Certificiate, by a British doctor, her year of birth is recorded as "31st July 2602", as it was the year according to the Japanese Imperial calendar, whose use was manditory on all official documents under the occupation.
This led to many a merry jape when renewing her passport, as her obviously geniune birth certificate was equally obviously faked. And badly. Some public officials took a fair bit of convincing that she was old enough to even apply for a passport, since she wasn't due to be born for a little over six centuries yet. In the end, they gave her a new one, but I believe that she still has the original filed away somewhere.
'No rational religion claims "supernatural" exists, that's an atheist slander.' - seen on slashdot.
On 11/11/11 (noone actually writes dates one-digit-at-a-time anymore anyways), at 11:11:11. You can actually have a hole date/time stamp without using anything but the digit 1.
As I recall it, "586" was the name the Pentium was supposed to be known as, but then Intel changed it for marketing and copyright reasons. Geeks of the world, unite for our babies' ancestors' birthdays!
You know its love when you memorize her IP address to skip DNS overhead.
It will next occur in the following millenium.
3/14/15 9:26:53
Mmmmmm.... pi...
See, there's still stuff to look forward to!
"Lawyers are for sucks."
- Doug McKenzie
THX anyone? November third, or March eleventh whichever.
Keep on knockin'
https://robbiecrash.me
That's what the Americans were doing. They were being Politically correct. By being both little-endian and big-endian in their date format, they try to offend nobody.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
According to most followers of Jesus, he lived until AD 33 or so, and only stayed dead for 3 days. Due to various circumstances, few were bummed.
I really should stop commenting on trivial tangents to stupid stories.
Most people don't even think inside the box.
I can't wait for the BACKSLASH summary of this article. Maybe I'll understand dates then.
zenray
the rest is just not logical.
only with y/m/d you have a perfect sort order everywhere. Everything else is just screwed up.
"Freiheit ist immer auch die Freiheit des Andersdenkenden" - Rosa Luxemburg, 1871 - 1919
In a couple of years we'll have 27/1/8. Kind of weak really. What I'm looking forward to is 3/14/15. That'll be pretty sweet.
We should really stop using Y99 dates, Okay?
It's embarassing that geeky slashdot uses Y99 dates:
article.pl?sid=06/08/02
We should really all be using International dates:(IS0 8601)
It is the most constistient format:
Date components are most to least significant order.
Time components are most to least significant order.
Digit components are most to least significant order.
Good example, international date:
Most to least components being AA-EE
AAaa-BB-CC DD:EE
2006-08-02 10:30
Bad examples:
Y99 US Date order:
BB/CC/aa DD:EE
08/02/06 10:30
European Date order:
CC-BB-AAaa DD:EE
02.08.2006 10:30
Y99 European Date order: (what this article is about)
CC.BB.aa DD:EE
02.08.06 10:30
Y99 International dates: (what slashdot uses in uris/db?)
aa-BB-CC DD:EE
06-08-02 10:30
that in Japan they do the little twist that on official papers you have to write the japanese year. Which dead confuses me, because I always forget in which japanese year I was born. I just know that we are now in H and before was... S? Showa? Now _thats_ damn confusing :)
"Freiheit ist immer auch die Freiheit des Andersdenkenden" - Rosa Luxemburg, 1871 - 1919
Maya knowledge, the present age also lasts 13 baktun, the current cycle of the long count will be completed when the count again reaches 13.0.0.0.0, in 2012. http://members.shaw.ca/mjfinley/calnote.htm
Does that mean each day we'll work faster?
Not only that, each day we'll get hotter! Yow!
But alas, a day later we'll all be obsoleteexcept for a few niche lives...
Thanks to this timely post, we can begin planning in earnest for the upcoming Boeing Days festivities next year which will be celebrated on the seventh of every month from February to July.
In a few years we will have (in US date style) 7/7/7, 3/14/15, 1/6/18 and 2/7/18.
L053R
Yes, ISO 8661 dates.
I live in the US, and I use international dates, unless a form forces an order.
Some europeans like European dates over US dates, but European dates are reverse significant order (while times are in significant order).
KDE uses international dates.
The date/time rollover is more natural, using interational dates. I think you may be less likely to write a 13th month check if you use international dates:
As a time rolls from:
10:59:59
to:
11:00:00
A date rolls from:
2005-12-31
to:
2006-01-01
But whatever the order you want to use, please stop using Y99 dates: 01/02/03.
I refuse to write any date in mm/dd/yy or dd/mm/yy format, because I can never remember which way people are going to interpret it. For technical work I use ISO format (2006-08-02), which is sortable and unambiguous to anyone who has encountered it. For non-technical use, like anything I have to sign, I use "Drafting" or "Military" format (2 Aug 2006) which is completely unambiguous. I have never once had a single person complain, and it saves me all sorts of headache.
ISO is nice because it sorts nicely:
2006-08-02 < 2007-07-07
I got used to it working with Peoplesoft and now it feels more natural than the oft-confusing 2/8/06 (8/2/06)?!
For visual dates, I'd like to see more "6 July 2005"-style, but we Americans would rather adopt the metric system than give up our date format.
Wer mit Ungeheuern kämpft, mag zusehn, dass er nicht dabei zum Ungeheuer wird. --Nietzsche
Again, don't confuse international dates (ISO 8661) with European dates.
Sometimes when I am updating some code documents with dates, I will replace the US Y99 dates with international dates,
So:
01/02/03 - code creation
becomes:
2003-01-02 - code creation
2006-08-02 - fixed a bug
International dates are significantly in order, as times are.
OTOH, you ended with a smiley, so maybe you were being sarcastic.
Copyrights, Patents, Trademarks: temporary loans from the Public Domain, not real property ("intellectual" or otherwise)
Today is 1154536012. None of this mm/dd/yy bullcrap.
I think that in 2106 we will also write 2/8/6. If not in 2106, 3006 for sure. What was a computer anyhow?
"When Nature Calls We All Shall Drown" Johan Edlund
Don't forget August 8, 2006 can be written as 8/08/6, and in 2008 as 8/08/8.
Just my $0.02 worth.
September 8th of next year the world will end, and I know the time. Luckly I plan on sleeping through it. I mean it will only last for a 10 ten of a second but I will still be waiting for that exact moment in time. It I wasn't an American I would be excited by August 9th that I for the rest of the world.
Ask the Stonecutters.
..there is no way you are from Europe. In the EU, mainly UK, fag means cigarette, and is not used as a derogatory term (afaik). You say that the American date system is faggy, and then go on to say that the European one is better. You must be an American-hateing American. Traitor.
Sig: I stole this sig.
Of course, it's harder to get interesting date numbers when you've got 8 digits to work with, two of them can't take many values and two or three more only change values very infrequently. 2011-11-02 20:11:11.02 is coming up, I guess.
2011-11-02_20-11-11_02
Or something. I don't usually deal with fractions of a second (as most of the shell scripts that I have the mangle the date command into fancy-schmancy variables don't run more than once per second). But I always dealt with a logical division in DATE vs TIME by using an underscore. It's a perfectly legal character in Linux, Solaris, and Tru/64 at a minimum, plus Windows I guess. Anyway, I always followed the idea LARGEST-TIME-INTERVAL.....SMALLEST-TIME-INTERVAL, as in YYYY-MM-DD_HH-MM-SS.
~X
sig?
Actually:
1) The only reason that it would be the year 6 is through the Gregorian Calendar, which wasn't around back then. So it wouldn't be 6, and
2) Jesus died around 30ish AD. He would've been born around 6.
Still, funny joke. I just couldn't resist putting a damper on it.
except then it will be for 1/8/7, 2/8/7, and 3/8/7.
You can add that story to this one now, but it will add faster if you wait till then.
Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
What about 6502 day? That came and went whitout any notice, you heartless bastiches!
Bender and the Apple II deserve better than that.
Anyone looking forward to 2/1/12?
The Poetry of Google Voice is very strange.
gv-poetry.com
I can't wait for March 13th, 2007. ... or 13-3-7 :)
$8.95/mo web hosting
An oddity that just occurred to me is that we Americans tend to say "fourth of July" more than "July fourth". Any guesses why we're inconsistent here?
Regarding the extensive debate over its m/d/y or d/m/y or d/m/yy or whatever the hell your calendar prefence is: WHO FETHING CARES? The entire point of this is that, by one particular format, the next few days are 286, 386, and 486. PERIOD. Yes yes, everyone here is perfectly aware that there were other days that fit, and that these days don't work out in some formats, but for Christ's sake does it matter? In one format, the upcoming days remind us of CPUs. Can't we just leave it at that?
Programmer: an ingenious device that converts caffeine into code.
All these little date games rely on people's persistant non-compliant use of two-digit years.
You know, when Y2K rolls around, you all are SO gonna regret this.
Any fan of Tom Sawyer is looking forward to International Rock Day when we all tell of our love of Rush. 2/1/12
And stuff that REALLY matters.
We Merricans have to be pushy every now and then. Shoot, without us, you smelly Europeans wouldn't have ASCII. Now you're trying to force Unicode down our throats like you do with your cheese and pate. Well, we'll just take our characters home with us, and what will you be left with? Only accent characters! Ha ha! Take that, frog!
The fact that you had to wait nearly two thousand years to get an x86 processor probably put a damper on it as well.
2/7/18
Pentiums were designated 80501-80503. Subsequent chips have been 8052x-8055x.
If you want a formattable date function, you can write it your damn self! This isn't a dig against people with other date formats. It's a way to point out a smallish programming project someone of middling skill can do to help a project that's open to broad collaboration.
/. right?
One argument people always give against Free Software and Open Source software is that not everyone can code, and that not all coders can code well enough to do what every app takes. Chances are, though, that if an Open Source program suits your needs well enough except for one small but important feature you can probably find someone who will add the feature for you. If you can't do it, a friend might do it for free or someone might do it for very little money since it's not a major project. They can't do that nearly as well or as easily if they don't have access to the code.
Instead of paying a bunch to get a clone of a closed-source program with an added feature or having to have an add-on program that fixes details like this, you can pay once and use it in-house. If you release it back into the world, then more people can use it. If the project maintainers include it in new releases, then you've scratched your own itch and made the project better.
I know it may seem a stretch to go from talking about dates to talking about how software handles dates to talking about Open Source, but this is still
In the UK you'll hear both ways being spoken, but it's always written DD/MM/YYYY.
I'm waiting for January 23, 2058
comes every 100 years. Our (great^n) grandparents survived it. Time to move on.
If you do what you always did, you get what you always got.
So this means that Moore's Law is finally blown into pieces?
As at the time of independence you used the English style (unsuprisingly). Check out this wikipedia article.
Specifically, my birthday, two years from next Tuesday. :D
It was also cool twenty years before that.
Then I get to look forward to dying, or my 118th birthday.
"My car gets fifty rods to the hogshead, and that's the way I likes it."
-- Abe Simpson
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
I was born on 8/8/88 so it makes no difference to me
That would be the "who speak the same language" part of my post.
A bit more seriously (but only a bit): There are many cultures who don't use the Gregorian system of months and years, although most do tie into our host planet's orbit and the phase of the moon in some way. Reconciling their calendars to "ours" is even trickier. And then there is the Maya calendar, which does things like incorporate the orbit of the planet Venus.
dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
1 = en = one and 10 = ti = ten
2 = to = two and 20 = tyve = twenty
3 = tre = three and 30 = tredive = thrity
4 = fire = four and 40 = fyrre = forty
5 = fem = five and 50 = halvtreds = fifty
6 = seks = six and 60 = treds = sixty
7 = syv = seven and 70 = halvfjerds = seventy
8 = otte = eight and 80 = firs = eighty
9 = ni = nine and 90 = halvfems = ninety
As you can see, no smart pattern with these numbers in the danish system. How should a person know that "seks"(6) x 10 = treds(60)?
With that said, we also have a smarter system, that works like the English one:
1 = et and 10 = ti
2 = to and 20 = toti
3 = tre and 30 = treti
4 = fire and 40 = fireti
...the 8th of every month this year is x86 in the US (where X = 1 to 12). :-)
Mainframe/UNIX Bit Twiddler and long time Windows/Linux Hobbyist.
The Theorem Theorem: If If, Then Then.
Should your post show as 07:09 AM since minutes make hours?
I really hate Dan Patrick.
13/3/7 is what all the little haxx0rz are waiting for! And if you're pulling the "Eh, Canada" card, then you're waiting another 31 years for your 1/3/37! Sorry. -_-
It's 08/02/2006. I might be 02/08/2006. 2006/08/02 and so on. However the shortest form normally excepted is 8/2/06. I can't think of one place that uses only a single digit, especially after the whole Y2K debaticle.
Easy conversion... just add the word "of", and it all makes sense again: "Wednesday 2nd of August, 2006". It's always made sense to me though as everywhere I've ever lived (half a dozen countries and counting) all use the dd/mm/yyyy format.
Once you're used to it you can even drop the "of" from long-format written dates, and simply add it back in when reading it aloud, IE: "Wednesday 2nd August, 2006" reads aloud exactly the same as the previous example.
Of course 5/8/6 will be 27.73412 hours long. Long live the 585.99999 !
Perhaps for short term events the most relevent feature is the day. /* This malloc function was first written 1991-07-16 */
"Lets meet on the third next month"...
But for the long term, documents, software and historical things, the most significant thing is the year.
The date in which we should complete the moon station is 2023-05-03.
The Stationers publishing monopoly started at: 1557-10-15.
Over time, the month and day become trivia.
So perhaps European dates make sense for speech, or appointments.
But for anything written or stored for long term access, ISO dates are presented in more more relevent and significant order.
With that, I would add for long term documents, more important than all of this is that the year is actually written, and not in Y99 form.
One of the greatest controversies of modern American literature is whether to use dd/mm/yyyy or mm/dd/yyyy.
The reason the article is correct is that America is wrong. dd/mm/yyyy makes a lot more sense for a simple reason: days are a subset of months which are in turn subsets of a year. Either use the ISO version YYYYMMDD or the version used by the rest of the world.
Of course neither that nor the switch to the metric system will ever happen.
Yes, it is a confusing as hell, but these days in Japan, you can generally get by with the 4 digit year (i.e. 1978 for my birthyear or 2006 for now), even on official documents... at least, as a foreigner. Cheers. :)
"Empathise with stupidity, and you're halfway to thinking like an idiot." - Iain M. Banks
By European, you mean everywhere but the USA right? Funny thing is, last time I checked, I wasn't in europe.
Chances are any disscution on Slashdot will degrade into a flamewar about ID/Christianity within 14 posts.
Europeans buy groceries in other countries.
I'd probably fly a plane to visit another state. Crossing an ocean is just out of the question.
Remember: in the US we get 2 weeks of vacation per year if we are lucky. (very rarely, old dudes get as much as 5 -- it's mostly theoretical)
No time, no money, no travel. It's that simple.
The USA is big enough that normal people really don't have to care about the outside world. They'll never see it unless they join the military. European life is about as real as hobbit life.
You can see the logic by looking at things like 9/11. We commonly skip the year, especially in speech. The ordering is thus like ISO and Japanese as long as we don't care about the year.
Notation follows speech. Saying "9th August" means something entirely different from "August 9th". It would be counting 9 months called August... in other words, 8 to 9 years ending on an August.
Sometimes we do want the year though. We're not about to put it on the front or stuff it in the middle. Thus, sadly, it gets tacked onto the end. Oh well.
Yup. I know that all too well...
Patent: from Latin patere, to be open
This is true, but I was thinking in the more immediate human terms. For all my stored documents and files I do keep them in the ISO format (YYYY-MM-DD) but I know these are useless in normal day-to-day life. If I ask a freind to meet me at the bar, they would be very confused by "Meet me at Twenty Oh-Six, Oh-Eight Oh-three".
Though I have run into the MM-DD / DD-MM problem before, it would be nice to standardize normal speech too. Sadly this will never happen.
A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
You probably don't realise it but that is also a "local" feature. In Europe you can use either, so that "My birthday is on December [the] 20th" or "Christmas day is on the 25th of December" are both equally valid.
:)
And why not? They both convey the same information perfectly clearly.
Like I say, agree to disagree
Enjoy Y2K? Roll-on Year 2037!
What I actually meant by European was European :). I have only experienced US and UK/European systems, so I was intentionally limiting the scope of the comment.
No harm meant...
Enjoy Y2K? Roll-on Year 2037!
in Dutch it's "rode auto" instead of "auto rood"...
But we do have the dd/mm/yyyy notation.
--- I am known for the ones who want to find me on the net. Is that a privacy risk or a privilege? One might wonder..
I think this day will be the ANSWER to a big question :)
Actually, the only date system that is internally consistent, and consistent with other non-metric measures, is ISO-8631, which specifies year-month-date order. Most importantly, it sorts correctly without requiring you to code exceptions into your sorting algorithm.
Of course, this, too, means that 2006-08-02, 2006-08-03 and 2006-08-04 are unexceptional dates.
www.wavefront-av.com
May you burn in the holy flames of Celestis, unbeliever. Hallowed are the Ori.
Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.