Author: Dave Gomboc
Date: 09:40:55 12/24/99
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On December 24, 1999 at 12:00:44, Keith Ian Price wrote: >On December 24, 1999 at 10:38:33, Albert Silver wrote: > >>On December 24, 1999 at 10:09:34, Charles Unruh wrote: >> >>>The millenium does not start till 2001!! 2000 is last year of this millenium. >>> >>>2000 is just the cap, 2001 is the beggining man i want to blow up the world i'm >>>tired of people refusing to acknowledge the obvious ughhh! Merry X-mas >>>>MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY NEW YEAR! >> >>Only if the calendar started with a 1. If on the other hand Year 1 represented >>the first year to pass (like a baby's first birthday), 2000 is indeed the >>beginning of the second millenium. The debate is in fact all based on this. I >>for one believe that Year 1 was the first year to pass, therefore the year 2000 >>is the beginning of the third millenium after Christ. >> >> Albert Silver > >I must admit I am rather surprised at this statement, Albert. You are normally >quite logical in your premises. Of course the calendar started with 1. People >didn't have computers back then, so starting with 0 didn't make sense to them. >And equally, of course year 1 represented the first year to pass (like a baby's >first birthday), so, of course the millenium starts with 2001. If year 1 was the >first year to pass in the 1st millenium, year 2001 will be the first year to >pass in the third millenium. The New York Times editorial staff is having a >battle over this right now. Their headline on January 1, 1901 was "Welcome to >The 20th Century". Some of the editors want to have a similar "Welcome to the >New Millenium" headline on January 1, 2000. But the others ask how will they >explain the 99-year century? > >kp Maybe the other editors you mention would be good at software development, where details matter. "When to party?" is about as deep as this issue gets, so whatever the answer, it's not going to matter too much. Dave
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