01:02:03 04/05/06
I was lucky enough to catch a moment of history. I snapped this picture of Firefox's Foxclocks plugin at precisely 01:02:03 (AM) on April 05, 2006. (04/05/06 in American Nomenclature). This is a neat moment in history that only happens once per century. My clock was set by the atomic standard too :) If you are not American, but go day/month/year, then this will happen on May 04, in about a month. What's up with the USA's screwed up date format, anyway? We seem to be good at violating international standards, don't we?




5 Comments:
Ahem. DO NOT PLAGERIZE. I need some recognition. Unless, of course, you knew this before me.
By
Qwerty, at 04:57
Pirate, and proud of it, I am! Ok, thanks for the tip off about this intersting fact. Did you see this uniqe moment, or were you sawing logs?
By
Excalibur, at 12:11
I was smelling daisies.
By
Qwerty, at 23:12
Yeah the date system in America is inferior to the "normal" date system... Why would anyone pick medium/smallest/biggest instead of a logical progression smallest/medium/biggest?
By
Brandon, at 19:22
So Dodds showed us a picture of the Meridian time in London, and it said, "The international time of the world" or something pompous like that. :)
By
Qwerty, at 21:27
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