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11/9

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-12 2:21

Where were you on 11/9

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-12 2:52

larping

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-12 5:49

Within enlightenment as I move lists of data and instructions around my cons cells

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-12 6:51

Jerking off in the bushes near Marks & Spencers

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-12 7:24

JACKSON 5 GET

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-12 8:27

JEWS

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-12 9:16

Ho keers?

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 1:53

I'll let you know in two months.

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 2:02

Tae-Kwon Do-training

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 3:59

>>8
Will you really?

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 4:19

>>8
HAHAHA AMERICAN DETECTED HAHAHA

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 6:26

1.22222222

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 11:07

high school english class watching it on tv

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 12:31

I wasn't born yet

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 12:33

>>11
Uneducated Europeon detected. Sensible date formats like YYYY-MM-DD are very common outside your little bubble of ignorance.

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 12:35

>>15
Wow, you're an idiot, you really think I'd make a serious comment in all-caps, bookended by 'HAHAHA'?

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 12:47

>>15
Also that's the European way of doing it anyway! IHBMFT

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 13:04

>>17
Europeons use DD-MM-YYYY, which doesn't make any sense at all unless you also use SS:MM:HH as a time format (and is still a bit odd unless you also reverse the order of the digits in each number).

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 13:10

>>18
Oh, well I'm European, and I use YYYY-MM-DD. Probably only because it makes sense in directory structures.

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 13:17

American.
I had been taught to use MM-DD-YYYY format since kindergarten/first grade.  I picked up DD-MM-YYYY in Spanish class.  I only use YYYY-MM-DD on files and directories (but not necessarily in them) strictly to simplify sorting.

I had one job application returned to me because using YYYY-MM-DD screwed up processing.  Processing.  19 84 0428 doesn't even make sense!

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 13:19

>>19
THIS is the only way that makes any fucking sense whatsoever.

Name: >>19 2010-09-13 13:27

Oh, it just hit me, it's turned into [it]this[/i] thread again.
Anyway I use DD/MM/YYYY in speech. (As in "The thirteenth of September, 2010", not "THIRTEEN, NINE, TWO THOUSAND AND TEN")

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 13:38

>>22
You know that's what this thread was about from the beginning. Why else would the title be backwards?
Well, except for that stupid left-to-right override thing...

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 17:08

>>11
9/11

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 18:37

>>23
I think if LRO/RLO are used they also happen to reverse the display of [], {}, (), <>, and /\, or something equally clumsy and bizarre.

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 19:43

/\
``LRO9/11" and ``11/9" should look exactly the same. If they don't, something is broken.

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 21:30

>>26‬‎
Ah. I must be thinking of some other weirdness or something.

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 23:14

>>27
How did you get that backwards `>'?

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-13 23:35

>>28
It's either a trick of that "reverse text" BBCode or that actually works.
28<<

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-14 0:54

>>30‬‎
penis

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-14 1:30

>>30‬‎
You win the prize
OF NOTHING

Name: Anonymous 2010-09-14 9:23

>>1҉    >>2

Name: Anonymous 2011-02-04 18:13

Don't change these.
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