^ 7:10AM works just as well, the zero in front is redundant it serves no useful purpose.
^ 7:10AM works just as well, the zero in front is redundant it serves no useful purpose.
Oh- I agree. Just a little joke alluding to the convention for Kelvin's registry number that some folks did not care for.![]()
I've found the whole idea that something with 24 units is measured with an instrument that has only 12 to be a bit silly.
The Day-Month-Year numeric format usually bugs the shit out of me and is quite confusing..
The Day-Month-Year numeric format usually bugs the shit out of me and is quite confusing..
Just think of it this way
The 1st day of the month, is followed by the 2nd, then the 3rd etc etc...
so today is 24/01/12 tomrrow is 25/01/12
01/24/12 followed by 01/25/12 is confusing, as I'd never say it was January, 24th day.
Time wise I'd imagination its naval/miltary that led 24hr.
At 06:00 hours (said oh six hundred), at 16:00 hundred, less confusion than 6am, 6pm.
But not sure how that works in US, Oh verses zero![]()
^ I think the point they were making is that the numbers go up sequentially. with the smallest date unit number increasing first. i.e the day.
The Day-Month-Year numeric format usually bugs the shit out of me and is quite confusing..
Just think of it this way
The 1st day of the month, is followed by the 2nd, then the 3rd etc etc...
so today is 24/01/12 tomrrow is 25/01/12
01/24/12 followed by 01/25/12 is confusing, as I'd never say it was January, 24th day.
Time wise I'd imagination its naval/miltary that led 24hr.
At 06:00 hours (said oh six hundred), at 16:00 hundred, less confusion than 6am, 6pm.
But not sure how that works in US, Oh verses zero![]()
At 06:00 hours (said oh six hundred), at 16:00 hundred, less confusion than 6am, 6pm.
The Day-Month-Year numeric format usually bugs the shit out of me and is quite confusing..
Just think of it this way
The 1st day of the month, is followed by the 2nd, then the 3rd etc etc...
so today is 24/01/12 tomrrow is 25/01/12
01/24/12 followed by 01/25/12 is confusing, as I'd never say it was January, 24th day.
Time wise I'd imagination its naval/miltary that led 24hr.
At 06:00 hours (said oh six hundred), at 16:00 hundred, less confusion than 6am, 6pm.
But not sure how that works in US, Oh verses zero![]()
It always makes more sense to start with the context, ie: the month before the date that it's in. Otherwise that number could be anything.
^ I think the point they were making is that the numbers go up sequentially. with the smallest date unit number increasing first. i.e the day.
That makes more sense. I couldn't understand what he/she was trying to convey due to the poor wording and sentence construction.
It always makes more sense to start with the context, ie: the month before the date that it's in. Otherwise that number could be anything.
At 06:00 hours (said oh six hundred), at 16:00 hundred, less confusion than 6am, 6pm.
except 16:00 is 4PM. 6PM is 18:00
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