Results
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Choice
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Votes
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Percent
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Celebrated the new millennium
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87
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17.9%
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Celebrated the new *year*
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232
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47.6%
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I played with my calculator all night
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36
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7.4%
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I idled in a TI channel all night
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15
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3.1%
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I did something else all night
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117
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24.0%
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Re: What did you do for the new year?
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AgntM13
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As others often say:
/sarcasim/Why would you play your calculator all night?/end sarcasim/
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Reply to this comment
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2 January 2000, 04:58 GMT
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Re: Re: What did you do for the new year?
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fatman
(Web Page)
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You know, that was really poor sarcasm. If you are going to copy people, you might as well do it right. In html, a tag is defined as having these around it <tag> and to finish the tag, you have this </tag>. So, in html, to center things, you would go <center>THINGS TO BE CENTERED</center>. That is why people go <sarcasm></sarcasm>. Like I said, if your going to do it, do it right. You don't see people quoting other people by saying something that is about the same. "To be, or not to be, that is the question." is not quoted by saying "The question is to be, or not to be.". Get it right!!! (Sorry, hope you don't take offense to this)
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Reply to this comment
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5 January 2000, 02:05 GMT
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Re: What did you do for the new year?
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mxpxfifws
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Well, I didn't celebrate the new millenium because it's not the new millenium. 2001 is the new millenium. I'm tired of hearing about "the new millenium" because the fact is it's not! Anyway, I'm tired and I just wanted to vent. Oh yeah, first post!! :)
Bryan F
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2 January 2000, 04:58 GMT
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Who cares???
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EMan2k1
(Web Page)
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I have to agree here. The year 1 A.D. was not really Christ's birth year (since it was figured incorrectly), so I don't really think anyone knows what the first year was. Also, our decades and centuries begin at the zero (1970, 1990, 3000, etc.), so doesn't it make sense to ring in the new millennium with the new century and decade? Since it's now the 21st century, I say it's also now the 2nd millennium. Even if you say decades and centuries are wrong, who's to say the first century wasn't just 99 years and the first millennium 999? Works for me.
At times in history we've had to adjust the years to correct the calendar with the earth. Maybe it's time to correct the millennium to 1000, 2000; not 1001, 2001. By the way, how much fun did any of you purists have ignoring the change of the millennium while we were all partying on New Year's?
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5 January 2000, 04:59 GMT
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partying like it's 2098
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dleet
(Web Page)
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Bob has $1.99
Joey gives Bob a penny.
Bob looks foolish as he celebrates the beginning of his third dollar.
Joey laughs and points at Bob.
nevermind.
The Gregorian calendar, the ONLY calendar relevant to the western Christian world, started at year 1, yes it's true. Since the millennium, century, and decade OBVIOUSLY <ahem> ended in 1999, then we are now just under 99 years from the next exciting rollover. See you in 2098!
->80's, 90's, then what?<- DL, live from 30km underground
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Reply to this comment
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9 January 2000, 05:24 GMT
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: What did you do for the new year?
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Luke Sneeringer
(Web Page)
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This argument makes sense.
Technically, I suppose you could call 1000-1999 a "millennium", although it's simply not valid to call it "the second millennium" simply because there was not a full millennium before it (only 99.9% of one). In the same way, there were not two full millenniums before Jan. 1, 2000 (only 1 and 99.9% of a second). But the time period from 1000-1999 is still a millennium (as the definition of a millennium is "a thousand years"). In the same way, 1900-2000 is technically a century, but it's not the "20th century" (there were only 18 centuries and 99% of the 19th before it).
Since we do not refer to the decades using ordinal numbers, they can technically start anywhere we want them to. For example, from March 6, 1984 to March 5, 1994 is a decade. However, you could not prefix this decade with an ordinal number (or at least not an ordinal integer) because there was not an integer number of decades between it and January 1, 0001.
Questions? Comments?
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Reply to this comment
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7 January 2000, 02:13 GMT
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