Stanislav. I appreciate the information you sent about date and time. In my mind, the yyyy mm dd date format makes sense for sticking on the end of file names so the files remain in alphabetical order. My United States passport uses 26 Mar 2013 format, which I prefer to use in all other cases because spelling out the month ensures that no person can mix the day up with the month. We have an International Trade section where I work, and I remember seeing a contract signed by someone in England along with a scrawled-in date using numbers only, 10 11 2004 which caused confusion because the person who signed the contract meant to convey 10 November, but it was misinterpreted in our office as October 11. Please see the date triangle graphic on my MetricPioneer.wordpress.com blog.
David Pearl MetricPioneer.com 503-428-4917

----- Message from [email protected] ---------
    Date: Mon, 25 Mar 2013 17:10:08 -0400
    From: Stanislav Jakuba <[email protected]>
 Subject: Hi
      To: [email protected]


David:
I sent you the Date & Time article because I noticed your European way of
D M Y. To be metric to me means  to go with ISO standards overall. SI
units is just one ISO standard. The cited Date & Time ISO standard bridges
the differences among all nations with its y m d sequence as described in
the article. So I thought that if you must annoy (:-) Americans with
something unfamiliar, it should not be a European standard, but rather an
International standard. All my industrial clients have adopted the ISO
sequence and I have been using it since it's issuance a 1/2 century ago. I
hope you will also.

On a different subject, if you send me your address I will mail you my SAE
paper about SI. I have extra copies from years past. Perhaps you can
enlighten a few people in the financial/government sector.
Stan



----- End message from [email protected] -----


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