[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Julian and Gregorian Dates in Lipno
Heinz Rode
heinz_rode at telus.net
Thu Aug 17 20:18:00 PDT 2006
Every one in Germany uses DD/MM/YYYY ; to be sure I use, like Rose and John
suggest the abreviated month.
It seems to me ? that everytime something metric gets transplanted to North America, some
people try their darndest to make it somehow different.
Take the metric wrench sizes; for decades the most common sizes were; 14, 15,
17, 19; when the auto industry decided on metric they came up with 18 mm bolt
heads which nobody had a wrench for.
Heinz Rode
----- Original Message -----
From: "gpvjem" <gpvjem at sasktel.net>
To: "Rose Ingram" <roseingram at shaw.ca>; "Earl.Schultz" <Earl.Schultz at telusplanet.net>;
<ger-poland-volhynia at eclipse.sggee.org>
Sent: 17 August, 2006 16:23
Subject: Re: [Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Julian and Gregorian Dates in Lipno
> It sure is easier to read as 16 Aug 2006 without a momentary pause to remember what
> sequence the last 4 numbers are in.
> I note my personal bank cheques now require me to enter DD/MM/YYYY, the exact reverse of
> the International Standards Assoc. So much for standardization. 8>)
>
> John Marsch
>
> -----------------------------
>
>
> It may be easier to solve the problem if every one type the month in
> abbreciated form instead of using a number, no matter what order we use or
> what genealogy program we use. :-)
>
> Rose Ingram
> -------
>
> From: "Earl.Schultz" <Sent: Thursday, August 17, 2006 2:30 PM
>
> >
> > Gary & Others,
> >
> > You made an interesting comment with respect to writing dates as
> > 12/06/1900
> > and I'm surprised we haven't resolved this matter once and for all. The
> > International Standards Association (or whatever they are called) has
> > accepted the format YYYY/MM/DD or 1900/06/12 (1900 June 12). Years ago as
> > a
> > member of the Ontario Genealogical Society I participated in a survey that
> > resulted in them deciding to write all dates as YYYY/MM/DD. I believe
> > that
> > Salt Lake City has also accepted that format. It does not lead to
> > misunderstandings (or at least much less chance) and all other time is
> > written from largest to smallest as in HH:MM:SS (hours/minutes/seconds).
> > It
> > is about time all genealogists adopt this format for the sake of accuracy.
> >
> > Earl Schultz
> >
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