Mm-dd-yy

WS78

Chill moan!
Joined
May 23, 2004
Messages
756
Location
Arendheim
What's up with the way Americans (US) use the month-day-year system when the rest of the world, the US military and finance sector use the regular day-month-year system?
 
Duke of Marlbrough said:
Just to be different, just like the rest of the measuring systems that are in place. ;)

If that were the case, why not wear a rubber chicken as a hat? :D
(just kidding)
 
It's because we are too busy beating the living crap out of smaller nations to be bothered with such trivial manners; it works for us and that's all we care!
 
I say "July Twenty-First" when refering to the date in speech. Therefore, when I write it, I will write "July 21" and when I abbreviate it I write "7/21/04".
 
For your information, the meter is indeed an abritrary value. But that's not the point.

The point is to have a decimal system, with international units system.

I don't know how you teach science in the US, but here we are using meters for length, meter per second for speed, etc.
 
Science is taught much the same way here with very few exceptions. As opposed to daily life, where the mile, degree Fahrenheit, gallon and pound rule.
 
When I write a date out, such as on a check, I'll use the Military style. 21 July 2004. I prefer to use my dates as 20040721, which just makes more sense to me. I don't like seeing dates like 21/7/04, it tends to confuse me as I grew up with 7/21/04. It's not so bad now, but on 1/8/04, I tend to see that as January 8, 2004 instead of August 1, 2004.

I thought a meter was the distance light travels in 1/300,000,000th of a second...

Edit: it would be nice if there was a worldwide standard. Sigh...
 
Definition: The meter is the length of the path travelled by light in a vacuum during a time interval of 1/299 792 458 of a second. (1983)

Ans since that uses the second...

Definition: The second is the duration of 9 192 631 770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium 133 atom. This definition refers to a caesium atom in its ground state at a temperature of 0 K. (1968)
 
It's the 4th of July isn't it? Not July 4th.
 
I haven't heard a sound explenation yet. Habit isn't enough for me.
 
The only advantage of Imperial measures is that you can divide measures into thirds and quarters more easily. They have their uses, like at the grocers, or ... yeah, but for anything else, it's completely pointless to have Imperial units.

As for mm-dd-yy, I think it's quite illogical to have it that way, since a day is smaller than a month, and a month is smaller than a year, so having it dd-mm-yy is much more consistent.
 
Mise said:
The only advantage of Imperial measures is that you can divide measures into thirds and quarters more easily. They have their uses, like at the grocers, or ... yeah, but for anything else, it's completely pointless to have Imperial units.

As for mm-dd-yy, I think it's quite illogical to have it that way, since a day is smaller than a month, and a month is smaller than a year, so having it dd-mm-yy is much more consistent.

I'm using yy-mm-dd at work, and dd-mm-yy in everyday life
 
Steph said:
I'm using yy-mm-dd at work, and dd-mm-yy in everyday life
Which makes sense, because it's consistent. If you had the years or days in the middle, that would be silly. As long as months are in the middle, it makes sense.
 
Back
Top Bottom