• point softare PROS and CONS

    From Martin Foster@2:310/31.3 to August Abolins on Tue Sep 22 14:02:00 2020
    Hello August!

    *** Saturday 27.04.19 at 19:22, August Abolins wrote to Martin Foster:

    For your perusal and comments/additions/corrections:
    https://kolico.ca/fidonet/echos/points/

    Thank you very much indeed for putting that up, much appreciated.
    Where should we post our comments/additions/corrections :)

    Oh.. this echo is probably fine for that. Or.. a netmail with "PRO" or "CON" somewhere in the Subject would get my attention too.

    Can you please add the following:

    Addition
    ========

    [APoint] PROS
    -------------
    Supports Styled Text(Bold, Italic, Underlined)

    Regards,
    Martin

    --- OpenXP 5.0.46
    * Origin: Bitz-Box - Bradford - UK (2:310/31.3)
  • From August Abolins@2:221/1.58 to Martin Foster on Sun Sep 27 09:21:00 2020
    Hello Martin!

    ** On Tuesday 22.09.20 - 14:02, Martin Foster wrote to August Abolins:

    Addition
    ========

    [APoint] PROS
    -------------
    Supports Styled Text(Bold, Italic, Underlined)


    DONE.

    The footnote [*8] has been added with your fix.

    And I adjusted the date format on that table to dd/mm/yyyy

    https://kolico.ca/fidonet/echos/points/


    --
    ../|ug

    --- OpenXP 5.0.46
    * Origin: ----------Do Not Fold, Spindle or Mutilate.---------- (2:221/1.58)
  • From Martin Foster@2:310/31.3 to August Abolins on Mon Sep 28 09:35:00 2020
    Hello August!

    *** Sunday 27.09.20 at 09:21, August Abolins wrote to Martin Foster:

    Addition
    ========

    [APoint] PROS
    -------------
    Supports Styled Text(Bold, Italic, Underlined)

    DONE.

    Thanks for that.

    The footnote [*8] has been added with your fix.

    And for that.

    And I adjusted the date format on that table to dd/mm/yyyy

    https://kolico.ca/fidonet/echos/points/

    Thanks for that also but take a close look at the month :-))

    Regards,
    Martin

    --- OpenXP 5.0.46
    * Origin: Bitz-Box - Bradford - UK (2:310/31.3)
  • From August Abolins@2:221/1.58 to Martin Foster on Mon Sep 28 08:19:00 2020
    Hello Martin!

    ** On Monday 28.09.20 - 09:35, Martin Foster wrote to August Abolins:


    And I adjusted the date format on that table to dd/mm/yyyy

    https://kolico.ca/fidonet/echos/points/

    Thanks for that also but take a close look at the month :-))


    888888ba .88888. dP dP dP
    88 `8b d8' `8b 88 88 88
    88 88 88 88 88aaaaa88a 88
    88 88 88 88 88 88 dP
    88 .8P Y8. .8P 88 88
    8888888P `8888P' dP dP oo


    Thanks for pointing that out.

    I recently paid closer attention to what my online banking
    system uses, invoices, and what the gov't prefers.

    Bank = dd/mm/yyyy.
    Statments = mm/dd/yyyy
    Gov't = yyyy/mm/dd

    If anything, we are conditioned to keep guessing what our
    reality is. :( No wonder I am confused.

    --
    ../|ug

    --- OpenXP 5.0.46
    * Origin: ----------Do Not Fold, Spindle or Mutilate.---------- (2:221/1.58)
  • From Chuck Pierson@2:221/6 to August Abolins on Tue Sep 29 22:15:30 2020
    Hello, August Abolins - Martin Foster.
    On 9/28/20 12:19 AM you wrote:

    Thanks for pointing that out. I recently paid closer attention to
    what my online banking system uses, invoices, and what the gov't
    prefers. Bank = dd/mm/yyyy. Statments = mm/dd/yyyy Gov't =
    yyyy/mm/dd

    Strange. In the US, most people and places use mm/dd/yyyy. In the
    military, we used dd/mm/yyyy. I got used to it, which helped me later.
    I worked in the oil and gas industry for years, and had communicated internationally a lot. Dates could have been confusing there.

    If anything, we are conditioned to keep guessing what our reality
    is. :( No wonder I am confused.
    --
    ../|ug --- OpenXP 5.0.46 * Origin: ----------Do Not Fold, Spindle or Mutilate.---------- (2:221/1.58)

    --
    Best regards!
    Posted using Hotdoged on Android

    ---
    * Origin: nntp://news.fidonet.fi (2:221/6.0)
  • From Martin Foster@2:310/31.3 to Chuck Pierson on Wed Sep 30 09:18:00 2020
    Hello Chuck!

    *** Tuesday 29.09.20 at 22:15, Chuck Pierson wrote to August Abolins:

    [snip]
    Strange. In the US, most people and places use mm/dd/yyyy. In the military, we used dd/mm/yyyy. I got used to it, which helped me later.
    I worked in the oil and gas industry for years, and had communicated internationally a lot. Dates could have been confusing there.

    Although I've lived in the UK all my life and was brought up to use the British date format(dd/mm/yyyy), I now much prefer to use the European
    date format(dd.mm.yyyy).

    Regards,
    Martin

    --- OpenXP 5.0.47
    * Origin: Bitz-Box - Bradford - UK (2:310/31.3)
  • From August Abolins@2:221/1.58 to Martin Foster on Wed Sep 30 08:19:00 2020
    Hello Martin!

    ** On Wednesday 30.09.20 - 09:18, Martin Foster wrote to Chuck Pierson:

    Although I've lived in the UK all my life and was brought
    up to use the British date format(dd/mm/yyyy), I now much
    prefer to use the European date format(dd.mm.yyyy).


    The "." vs "/" makes no difference to me. Albiet, I am partial
    to the "." when illustrating a phone number (See the very top
    of my biz website: https://ashlies.ca

    When I worked in industry where the client was primarily the
    military, the spec documents and other correspondences used
    what I call the odemeter arrangement for the date:

    yyyy mm dd, or yyyymmdd

    That made the most sense for me. It was super easy to sort
    files and instantly see the proper order of things.

    --
    ../|ug

    --- OpenXP 5.0.46
    * Origin: ----------Do Not Fold, Spindle or Mutilate.---------- (2:221/1.58)
  • From August Abolins@2:221/1.58 to Chuck Pierson on Sun Jan 10 09:00:00 2021
    Hello Chuck!

    ** On Tuesday 29.09.20 - 22:15, Chuck Pierson wrote to August Abolins:

    Thanks for pointing that out. I recently paid closer attention to
    what my online banking system uses, invoices, and what the gov't
    prefers. Bank = dd/mm/yyyy. Statments = mm/dd/yyyy Gov't =
    yyyy/mm/dd

    Strange. In the US, most people and places use mm/dd/yyyy. In the military, we used dd/mm/yyyy. I got used to it, which helped me later.
    I worked in the oil and gas industry for years, and had communicated internationally a lot. Dates could have been confusing there.


    I think yyyy/mm/dd makes the most sense. It resembles the way an odometer works or how any other click counter works, or how the incremental numbering system works in general.

    I've worked with the MIL-STD docs for the Standard Electronic Modules Program (SEMP). That is where I first noticed the consistent and sensible use of dd/ mm/yyyy. (like an odometer in reverse)

    Looking at some of those MIL-STD docs brings back a lot of memories. My work pertained to the electrical requirements of the modules. Start with MIL-STD 1389C and begin the journey of standard pointing to standard pointing to standard pointing to standard... (arghh)

    --
    ../|ug

    --- OpenXP 5.0.48
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