On 7 Jan, Juan Cespedes wrote: > On Tue, 6 Jan 1998, Fabrizio Polacco wrote: > >> Continuing off-topic, I remember that when I was young (very young) I >> read a nice proposal for a reform of the calendar, made by Isaac Asimov. > > Isaac Asimov suggests that we should always use the decimal > system, with one day as the base, and forget about hours, minutes, > seconds, weeks, months, years and so on. For example, the actual date > would be "10227.4042" (10227 days since Jan 1 1970, 0.4042 days since > 12 AM (UTC)). Using 4 decimals will give us a precision of 8.6 > seconds. >
Humm, the one that I recall was to divide the year in 4 seasons and count days per season instead than month (91), plus one spare day to be used as a "foolish-day". The peculiarity was that in that proposal the sequence of days, weeks, seasons was the same on every year, that is to say that (I guess) the 3rd of spring was thursday on every year ... He calculated the savings of all the economic activities because of a highly prevedible calendar. Fabrizio, flying highly offtopic :-) -- | [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] | Pluto Leader - Debian Developer & Happy Debian 1.3.1 User - vi-holic | 6F7267F5 fingerprint 57 16 C4 ED C9 86 40 7B 1A 69 A1 66 EC FB D2 5E > more than 35 months are needed to get rid of the millennium. [me] -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .