Interesting. A misspelling of the title on Amazon (Darnkess, instead of Darkness), but the title on the book cover is the correct spelling of Darkness. Intentional?
Does anyone actually know why the US puts its dates in the wrong order?
It's logical to put smaller to larger values in order DD/MM/YY.
It isn't logical to put them in medium/small/large order.
Also, how do US nameservers name their DNS zone files? (techie question)
In the UK they would be yyyymmddnn.txt where nn is a daily revision number, that way when you increase the date (dd) by one it still becomes the numeralogically latest date and get picked up by the dns daemon.
I have taken to that kind of "stardate" convention, e.g., 20250521, for a file name appendage or prefix. It enables files to automatically stack from small (early) to large (late), or vice versa. For more normal dating in text fields, I like the military convention of ddmmyyyy, which does not stack properly in file names.
"think mirror"
"Ten days of darkness"
It's time boys. Suicide weekend possibly coming this weekend or next
Q never said ten days OF darkness.
Q said the following.
Searching for the last one takes you here. Read what the book is about.
https://www.amazon.com/Three-Days-Darnkess-Aitken/dp/1505633400
Interesting. A misspelling of the title on Amazon (Darnkess, instead of Darkness), but the title on the book cover is the correct spelling of Darkness. Intentional?
Search further on google, every site spells it as Darnkess for some reason, yet the cover is correct spelling?
What about when he responded to an anon who asked specifically about the "ten days of darkness"? In which Q responded, "shutdown"
I think any reasonable person can discern that the quote reads as ten days-darkness.
That’s fair because I see this.
u/#q282
u/#datefag
u/#happening
21.5.25
Does anyone actually know why the US puts its dates in the wrong order?
It's logical to put smaller to larger values in order DD/MM/YY.
It isn't logical to put them in medium/small/large order.
Also, how do US nameservers name their DNS zone files? (techie question)
In the UK they would be yyyymmddnn.txt where nn is a daily revision number, that way when you increase the date (dd) by one it still becomes the numeralogically latest date and get picked up by the dns daemon.
I have taken to that kind of "stardate" convention, e.g., 20250521, for a file name appendage or prefix. It enables files to automatically stack from small (early) to large (late), or vice versa. For more normal dating in text fields, I like the military convention of ddmmyyyy, which does not stack properly in file names.
Cause it makes more sense
Nameserver files are in YYYYMMDD
Some date humor for you: ISO 8601
It's a shame Randall is totally woke
Agree. Her earlier stuff was much better, since it focused on the geek stuff.
Because Fuck You King George and all your child fucking / eating EU Royalty relatives..
And coffee because fuck your tea.
Nothing there for me to disagree with. He isn't my King, and I only drink coffee.
Likely to do with physical calenders. It tells you what month to turn to, and then the day.
So normal order of operations for anything you'd need to select month, instead of current mo th where you would often just use the day.
Cannot comprehend?
Can one comprehend darkness?
https://www.facebook.com/100095328189213/posts/706385489215718/
Fact: Palindromes were invented by Sarah Palin
True story!
Holy Dyslexia aixelsyD yloH
I love the smell of date fagging before breakfast! Kek