A new Action Adventure Game that KICKS ARSE!!
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A new Action Adventure Game that KICKS ARSE!!
http://www.adventtrilogy.com/
Seriously, look at the trailer, this game is truly going to rock, I already pre ordered my own copy, this looks so frikin' cool. Its stated that its an adventure game with a lot of action of course.
Tell me what you guys think? :D
Sorry if Im being too hyped about this. :p
Due for release on 04/11/2005
Seriously, look at the trailer, this game is truly going to rock, I already pre ordered my own copy, this looks so frikin' cool. Its stated that its an adventure game with a lot of action of course.
Tell me what you guys think? :D
Sorry if Im being too hyped about this. :p
Due for release on 04/11/2005
Re: A new Action Adventure Game that KICKS ARSE!!
hehe I think it's a bit past the due date, don't you think?Alias wrote:Due for release on 04/11/2005
Re: A new Action Adventure Game that KICKS ARSE!!
??? What do you mean by "only Americans write the month first"? And by SA do you mean South America? I simply had thought there was a typo there since he said he preordered and the release date says 4/11/2005. I figured he meant 2006 not 2005. Sorry if I am at fault here.Gronagor wrote:Only americans write the month first. Since Alias came from SA, and lives in the UK: nothing wrong with how he wrote it.
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Hehe. Yeah. And there have been a lot of confusions and miscommunications because of these types of 'minor' differences.Pidgeot wrote:Most of the world write dates in a dd/mm/yyyy or yyyy/mm/dd format. North America is the only place where the mm/dd/yyyy format is used, which can lead to great confusion to people who are not aware of the difference.
SA would be South Africa.TheGuy wrote:??? What do you mean by "only Americans write the month first"? And by SA do you mean South America? I simply had thought there was a typo there since he said he preordered and the release date says 4/11/2005. I figured he meant 2006 not 2005. Sorry if I am at fault here.
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This is the first time that I've heard of that sort of dating being a purely north american thing. I'm not sure about that. There is also inconsistency in Canada, which takes a lot of stuff from England. You're sure it doesn't happen there as well?
It's not so much a problem to have a date go MONTH/DAY/YEAR if you ALWAYS do it that way. But the problem is, all three ways go in Canada, which makes telling between MONTH/DAY/YEAR and DAY/MONTH/YEAR rather difficult...er, impossible in several cases.
Personally, I think YEAR/MONTH/DATE is the smartest way to put things together. Let's just all agree to do it that way from now on, kay?
It's not so much a problem to have a date go MONTH/DAY/YEAR if you ALWAYS do it that way. But the problem is, all three ways go in Canada, which makes telling between MONTH/DAY/YEAR and DAY/MONTH/YEAR rather difficult...er, impossible in several cases.
Personally, I think YEAR/MONTH/DATE is the smartest way to put things together. Let's just all agree to do it that way from now on, kay?
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Canada officially goes DD/MM/YYYY - the USA goes MM/DD/YYYY
This causes no end to confusion when communicating with the USA. Most of the world uses the Day, Month, Year format. However, when spoken, do you say, "the eleventh day of April, two-thousand and five?"
No... and so in the USA the Month, Day, Year does make sense because it is easier to have the date listed as you would speak it. We say dates as Month, Day, Year. Ok so I am guessing at the reasoning here, but maybe that's why in the USA it is backwards to most other places in the world.
We've had problems with sending/receiving data on many occasions. When imported into a database, it makes a big mess. 05/04/2005 ... is that May 4th 2005 or is it April 5th 2005? Depends on where the data came from. As you can imagine this causes a massive headache when trying to merge data from multiple sources, and keep it in chronological order.
We have many differences. In Canada we use the metric system - except that when we talk about our weight it is usually in pounds instead of kilograms - and height is usually in feet instead of metres. I like the metric system, although I still feel strange saying I am 192 centimetres tall - instead of just saying "I'm 6'3". Going across the border driving is always fun too. At least most cars have both MPH (Miles per hour) and km/h (Kilometres per hour) marked on their speedometers. It's just when you forget and are going 100 MPH thinking you are doing 100 km/h.
We even have different spellings for certain words. In Canada, it's, "Colour, Armour, Honour, Neighbour"... in the USA, it's, "Color, Armor, Honor, Neighbor." (There are more too, just can't think of them right now)
Canada tends to have more of a European influence than the USA. Why would we want to be the same anyway? That would be so boring.
This causes no end to confusion when communicating with the USA. Most of the world uses the Day, Month, Year format. However, when spoken, do you say, "the eleventh day of April, two-thousand and five?"
No... and so in the USA the Month, Day, Year does make sense because it is easier to have the date listed as you would speak it. We say dates as Month, Day, Year. Ok so I am guessing at the reasoning here, but maybe that's why in the USA it is backwards to most other places in the world.
We've had problems with sending/receiving data on many occasions. When imported into a database, it makes a big mess. 05/04/2005 ... is that May 4th 2005 or is it April 5th 2005? Depends on where the data came from. As you can imagine this causes a massive headache when trying to merge data from multiple sources, and keep it in chronological order.
We have many differences. In Canada we use the metric system - except that when we talk about our weight it is usually in pounds instead of kilograms - and height is usually in feet instead of metres. I like the metric system, although I still feel strange saying I am 192 centimetres tall - instead of just saying "I'm 6'3". Going across the border driving is always fun too. At least most cars have both MPH (Miles per hour) and km/h (Kilometres per hour) marked on their speedometers. It's just when you forget and are going 100 MPH thinking you are doing 100 km/h.
We even have different spellings for certain words. In Canada, it's, "Colour, Armour, Honour, Neighbour"... in the USA, it's, "Color, Armor, Honor, Neighbor." (There are more too, just can't think of them right now)
Canada tends to have more of a European influence than the USA. Why would we want to be the same anyway? That would be so boring.

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Hmm... no we say Eleven April, two-thousand and five.Ghost_Rider wrote:This causes no end to confusion when communicating with the USA. Most of the world uses the Day, Month, Year format. However, when spoken, do you say, "the eleventh day of April, two-thousand and five?"
Do you say April, the 25th day, two-thousand and five??? :lol
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Gronagor wrote:Do you say April, the 25th day, two-thousand and five??? :lol

In numeric date format that would directly translate to 04/25/2005 -- the "American" way. In school here we are taught to write the dates as the name of the month, day of the month, and year. Again, same as the US format.
However, when it comes to bank statements, legal documents, government documents, it is always numeric DD/MM/YYYY. We are very inconsistent. We are a slightly confused nation.

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Not truly. The only time confusion may arise is when you use the short MM/DD/YYYY format. Though the format is, in terms of relative placement of the elemnts, the same, it makes a world of difference.Ghost_Rider wrote:In numeric date format that would directly translate to 04/25/2005 -- the "American" way. In school here we are taught to write the dates as the name of the month, day of the month, and year. Again, same as the US format.
On a related note, in Danish, we say "10. oktober 2005" - literally "10th October 2005".
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