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Date:      Sat, 4 Dec 1999 00:42:55 -0700 (MST)
From:      "Kenneth D. Merry" <ken@kdm.org>
To:        dg@root.com
Cc:        adam@whizkidtech.net (G. Adam Stanislav), freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: So, what do we call the 00's?
Message-ID:  <199912040742.AAA62858@panzer.kdm.org>
In-Reply-To: <199912040737.XAA08969@implode.root.com> from David Greenman at "Dec 3, 1999 11:37:09 pm"

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David Greenman wrote...
> >G. Adam Stanislav wrote...
> >> At 15:20 03-12-1999 -0700, Kenneth D. Merry wrote:
> >> >> not expect anything to happen throughout the year 2000. Or, that I was the
> >> >> only one who knows that Y2K = year 2048.
> >> >
> >> >Don't you mean 2049? :)
> >> 
> >> No, I don't. Unless they changed powers of 2 and I missed it. :-)
> >
> >Just as the new millennium starts in 2001 because the years were numbered
> >starting at 1 (1 + 2000 == 2001), 1 + 2048 == 2049.
> 
>    I've heard this argument before (about years starting at 1), but I think
> it is wrong. The calander is supposedly based on the birthdate of Christ.
> People don't start out being one year old, so although there was no 'year 0',
> the time before the first full year would have been measured in smaller units
> like months and days. If this is the case, then the year 2000 would be the
> start of the next millenium.

The calendar skips from 1 B.C. to 1 A.D.  There's no zero year.  So the
year before the first full year A.D. was 1 B.C.

Although it is roughly based on the birth of Christ, for whatever reason
they decided to start numbering at 1 instead of 0.

Ken
-- 
Kenneth Merry
ken@kdm.org


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