I can't believe this hasn't become a thing to be honest, every year I celebrate 17/01 as "Star Trek day". Is there some relevance to 2018 that I'm missing?
I don't know of a spedial connection for 2018, just thought that it's 17th of January. This made me think of this picture...
ArcherNX01 said: To me "Star Trek Day" will be the anniversary of the first episode broadcast in the USA on September 8, 1966. You don't remember? "Space Seed" The choice of 2018 for space travel becoming faster, possibly even the beginning of faster than light travel, is obviously a homage to James Blish's They Shall Have Stars also known as Year 2018! (1956), part of his Cities in Flight series. It's a sad thing to think that 62 years have passed with no development of immortality drugs, no antigravity, and no faster than light drive. Sigh.
May the 4th be with you. I seem to recall Paramount chose 17/01/01 to release the Director's Cut of The Motion Picture on DVD. My vote goes to September the 8th, as the premiere date. That month needs all the help it can get.
I've always (since 1996) celebrated April 5th (4/5/2063) as First Contact Day and a celebration of all things Trek.
True, however just like the imperial system the US is one of the few countries to use the MDY format. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date_format_by_country As the majority of the population of the planet uses DMY that's what most people will see when a date is written numerically i.e. 17-01-18 will be seen as the 17th of Janurary 2018.
Shouldn't the question be, on what planet can one celebrate Enterprise Day? (If I am not mistaken, the Bajoran year is long enough.)
As an American, I must say the European Calendar makes far more sense. Of course, the calendar format that makes the absolute most sense is Year/Month/Day. When filing on a computer, the numbers will always proceed in order. I also like the Holocene Calendar where it's the year 12,018. Add 10,000 years to the Gregorian Calendar and then in all of recorded history, the dates in Human Civilization move upward. No BC and AD, counting down and then up again.