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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: October 11th, 2023

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  • Yes and YYYY-MM-DD can potentially be interpreted as YYYY-DD-MM. So that is an zero argument.

    No country uses “year day month” ordered dates as standard. "Month day year, " on the other, hand has huge use. It’s the conventions that cause the potential for ambiguity and confusion.

    That is great for your team, but I don’t think that your team has a size large enough to have any kind of statistically relevance at all. So it is a great example for a specific use case but not an argument for general use at all.

    Entire countries, like China, Japan, Korea, etc., use YYYY-MM-DD as their date standard already.

    My point was that once you adjust, it actually isn’t painful to use as it first appears it could be, and has great advantages. I didn’t say there wasn’t an adjustment hurdle that many people would bawk at.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_date_formats_by_country





  • I have never said or intended to imply that there were no advances made in the last 20 or 30 years.

    This would be great news if it was commercialy viable, but it isn’t. It NEVER is.

    That’s pretty definite by any measure.

    But I get it. 99% of the announcements go nowhere. And it’s worse if an announcement is just hype or hyperbole. However, in science we have to do the 99% to find the 1% of true advancements.

    So of your point is just that you don’t like the hyperbole, then using hyperbole yourself is not doing yourself any favour. Of course people are going to be more measured and realistic in reply to your blatant over-statements and denials.