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A question in suggestions has got be wondering.
In Britain we display the date as day/month/year, but the Americans display it as month/day/year.
Why are there two different ways and do other countries use other ways of displaying it?
No best answer has yet been selected by AngelofDeath. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I don't think you'll find us adopting American date format too soon, because as you say it's more logical and therefore better programatically to use the European format.
However the American Billion is more sensible because it fits in with the SI unit convention of having a new prefix for every multiple of a thousand
nano, micro, milli, Kilo, Mega, Giga etc.
and six hundred and fourty seven thousand million seems such a mouthfull!
UTC is not quite (micro-seconds in it) the same as GMT.
I don't have a chip on my shoulder with the Yanks as such, I'm worried about any detrimental, external influence on our society. But, I do admit that their use of Aluminum is correct. I think it was our Humphrey Davey who changed our spelling to Aluminium (just so's all metals might end with ium.)
Ah Cristo, don't forget that if you travel to mars you will be travelling at speeds which are nearer the speed of light than normal, thus, for you, time and your watch will slow down. When you decelerate and land on Mars you will have to reset your time to UTC. but possibly not as much as the difference between here and the States.
Wikipedia tells us that 'Milliard' is only used now in other European languages, UK & US having adopted Billion, shame!
yymmddhhmm is used by comm's personnel to date stamp their messages but usually only the ddhhmm if comms logs are kept.
So, who sets up the date/time format in which folders and contents are arranged? Good old Bill Gates!