Well aren't you lucky ... but does being a firefighter in the Air Force pay enough? I'm not much for estimating the annual pay of military jobs. <img src="graemlins/hmmm.gif" border="0" alt="[Hmmm]" />
<strong>Americans just write the day as people say it. If in Europe, people say 21 February instead of February 21, that's fine but we just write the day the same way we say it.
Here in the US, if we're asked the date, we always say the month first, then the day.</strong><hr></blockquote>
The latin languages say the equivalent of the the 21st of February. The British may have picked this up as a Frenchism, I dunno if that's what they say, but they to write what they say. It is annoying isn't it. Numerical dates ought to just ascend day month year (shortest to longest, an logical pattern) Then everybody would know what 2/3/03 meant and woulnd't have to wonder if it was really 3/2/03
iPod delay? Ummmmm. Since Apple doesn't pre-announce new products much, I'd say there's "no such animal". Yes, I know, the original iPod was pre-announced, but that was pretty much an exception. THe only people who know when the revised iPods will go on sale are SJ, PS and probably somebody at Chiat-Day who place and design the ads.
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[ 02-22-2003: Message edited by: os10geek ]</p>
<strong>Americans just write the day as people say it. If in Europe, people say 21 February instead of February 21, that's fine but we just write the day the same way we say it.
Here in the US, if we're asked the date, we always say the month first, then the day.</strong><hr></blockquote>
The latin languages say the equivalent of the the 21st of February. The British may have picked this up as a Frenchism, I dunno if that's what they say, but they to write what they say. It is annoying isn't it. Numerical dates ought to just ascend day month year (shortest to longest, an logical pattern) Then everybody would know what 2/3/03 meant and woulnd't have to wonder if it was really 3/2/03