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TeeGee wrote:3/14/15
Dukasaur wrote:It only works if you use the archaic American convention of Month/Day/Year.
Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
Dukasaur wrote:TeeGee wrote:3/14/15
It only works if you use the archaic American convention of Month/Day/Year.
To anyone outside of the U.S. who uses Day/Month/Year or Year/Month/Day, today is nothing special.
Well, actually, it is kind of special. Today is the first day that I've ever eaten moose, so it is somewhat of a new and unique day...
TeeGee wrote:Dukasaur wrote:TeeGee wrote:3/14/15
It only works if you use the archaic American convention of Month/Day/Year.
To anyone outside of the U.S. who uses Day/Month/Year or Year/Month/Day, today is nothing special.
Well, actually, it is kind of special. Today is the first day that I've ever eaten moose, so it is somewhat of a new and unique day...
so Canadians use the correct format and don't follow the US?
Dukasaur wrote:TeeGee wrote:Dukasaur wrote:TeeGee wrote:3/14/15
It only works if you use the archaic American convention of Month/Day/Year.
To anyone outside of the U.S. who uses Day/Month/Year or Year/Month/Day, today is nothing special.
Well, actually, it is kind of special. Today is the first day that I've ever eaten moose, so it is somewhat of a new and unique day...
so Canadians use the correct format and don't follow the US?
Canadians use an inconsistent mish-mash of American and British forms, both in language and in everything else.
People like me who went through school before computers tend to use more British and European usages. The younger generations tend to use more American usages, because they do most of their work on computers, and most software is American-made. So, the defaults in Microsoft Office and stuff derived from it are always in American, and you have to care enough to fight your way through the settings and get rational date formats, etc. If you just go with the defaults and don't customize, the software will slowly but surely push you into American spelling, American grammar, American units of measurement, etc.
Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
DaGip wrote:Dukasaur wrote:TeeGee wrote:Dukasaur wrote:TeeGee wrote:3/14/15
It only works if you use the archaic American convention of Month/Day/Year.
To anyone outside of the U.S. who uses Day/Month/Year or Year/Month/Day, today is nothing special.
Well, actually, it is kind of special. Today is the first day that I've ever eaten moose, so it is somewhat of a new and unique day...
so Canadians use the correct format and don't follow the US?
Canadians use an inconsistent mish-mash of American and British forms, both in language and in everything else.
People like me who went through school before computers tend to use more British and European usages. The younger generations tend to use more American usages, because they do most of their work on computers, and most software is American-made. So, the defaults in Microsoft Office and stuff derived from it are always in American, and you have to care enough to fight your way through the settings and get rational date formats, etc. If you just go with the defaults and don't customize, the software will slowly but surely push you into American spelling, American grammar, American units of measurement, etc.
It's March 15th now, so whatever you say is meaningless dribble.
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