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#3378 |
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Jun 2003
2·3·7·112 Posts |
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#3379 |
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Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
622410 Posts |
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#3380 |
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Bamboozled!
"𒉺𒌌𒇷𒆷𒀭"
May 2003
Down not across
22·5·72·11 Posts |
There was a time when my email address was pcl@uk.ac.ox.robots
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#3381 |
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Jun 2003
2×3×7×112 Posts |
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#3382 |
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Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
24·389 Posts |
I had never thought of website domain names to be an ordered list. But anyhow, it is not guaranteed that the same domain name with a different TLD belongs to the same entity.
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#3383 | |
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Feb 2017
Nowhere
13·359 Posts |
Quote:
And there are several different calendars in current use. The Gregorian calendar is perhaps the most widely used, certainly so in commerce. The names of the months in the Gregorian calendar reflect a change from the old Roman calendar, when the new year was deemed to begin with Spring, and winter wasn't on the calendar. That's why the numerical prefixes for the months September to December indicate two less than the number of the month in succeeding calendars, up until the Gregorian. With the notable exception of the Islamic calendar, adjustments have been devised for modern calendars to keep them synchronized with the seasons. This too is convention, not "logic." Here in the good old U-S-of-A, it is customary to give dates in month-day-year format. This is reflected in, for example, President Roosevelt's address to Congress the day after the attack on Pearl Harbor: "Yesterday, December seventh, nineteen forty-one,..." It may seem unsatisfactory in that the units don't proceed according to size, but at least it is consistent. But there is a conspicuous exception to this custom in a commonly-used name for the national holiday commemorating the signing of the Declaration of Independence -- the Fourth of July. As to weights and measures, it may be noteworthy that after France mandated use the metric system, it caused a lot of confusion, because people in every locality also kept using their customary systems. France finally had to mandate the exclusive use of the metric system. Enacting that sort of measure would be difficult here in the USA. There is also a practical difficulty now which did not exist -- or at least, not to nearly as large a degree -- in the mid-Nineteenth Century: just think of the amount of machinery, infrastructure, and construction in place, which was designed and built under the English system -- diameters of pipes, screws, nuts and bolts. Threads per inch. And on and on. You can't just wave a wand and change all of that stuff. If you want to have the metric system used exclusively here, you need to deal with that "inertia" problem. |
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#3384 |
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Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
11000010100002 Posts |
The default *nix "date" command defies all logic.
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~ date Tue 15 Nov 12:34:56 +00 2016 At least it doesn't use the AM/PM thing. That would've made it even worse. |
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#3385 | |
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Feb 2017
Nowhere
123B16 Posts |
Quote:
I note that the date you give is almost two years ago. Perhaps your machine decided it did not want to go on, a week after the 2016 election? Last fiddled with by Dr Sardonicus on 2018-11-08 at 23:43 |
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#3386 | |
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Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
141208 Posts |
Quote:
Other countries exist. It's a long story to explain the ~2yr delay, but it has nothing to do with the election process in a country that uses those crazy date formats.
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#3387 | ||
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Feb 2017
Nowhere
110738 Posts |
Quote:
(Looks at manual) Hmm. For purposes of sorting dates since January 1, 1970 00:00 UTC, it appears that date -j -f "%a %b %d %T %Z %Y" "`date`" "+%s" fills the bill. It converts the date to the number of seconds since that time. Quote:
The two obvious possibilities for how it could have got that way are, (1) it's deliberately set that way (why it would be, I have no idea), or (2) for some reason, "time stopped" on that computer for almost two years -- perhaps it was powered down for that long and the date stayed where it was when the plug got pulled; and after power was restored, time resumed at that point, and the date was never reset. Why it would not have been reset is something I can't fathom. Perhaps resetting it would simply upset too many apple carts... |
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#3388 | ||
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Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
24·389 Posts |
Quote:
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