Yes, but when spoken, people say “March first, 2010.”
Anyway, I don’t even see why what was stated in the OP is a problem. How does writing “March 1” mean Americans have to change how they write the date? Many people write the name of the month, it’s not some big changeover that will cause confusion. This whole thing is really trying to find problems where there are none.
Yep, great suggestion/request. Having to type out the month doesn’t hurt my little 'ol American brain one bit. Just doing my part for international cooperation you know.
But, in case you haven’t been reading, ALL people don’t.
To me the OP sounds eminently reasonable
Why don’t we adapt CCYYMMDD format (e.g. 2010/03/02) which gives the advantage of all dates being in numerical order for most of the next 80,000 years ? :d&r:
Perhaps not currently, but in ten years time when the event has bypassed a significant part of the population, they may very well be confused.
I always thought the decision to reduce such a monumental event to three digits was a mistake. A date, “September 11th 2001” has more resonance than just numbers.
I’d be stunned if it’s that low. I’d guess it more to be 30%, though maybe that’s aiming too high. It’s hard to judge, as most of the participants don’t put their actual location in their profile, including myself, or it’s not displayed for Guests.
I think a lot of people assume that the default location of anybody is America until it is proven otherwise, which skews the guessed statistics.
I don’t. Most often I say “1st of March, 2010,” and it’s for the same reason that you don’t; we arrange our dates in order of magnitude: day, month, year.
Cause the board is based in Chicago? Because the column that spawned it is one that runs in US papers? Because Europeans have better things to do with their time?
That points to Americans as the majority, which I accept. I just don’t believe, in my experience with this board since 1999, that it’s as extreme as a 95/5 split.
We’ve had attempts to track where Dopers come from before–I recall that Idle Thoughts did some work in this area some years ago. Maybe someone’s search-fu can find something more recent, but for now, here’s a list he or she compiled based on posters’ responses in 2005.
It’s a little confusing at first, since duplicates appear–the list is based on place of birth, place of current and past residences, and so on. There are also many posters named in the results who no longer post. But I’d guess that the nationalities of those who leave and those who arrive probably don’t change much. It’s not like we lost all our European posters while gaining a multitude of Americans.
At any rate, while the results show the majority of posters who responded to Idle Thoughts’ poll to be American, it also shows that there are a great number who aren’t.
I’m American, and I’m happy to follow this suggestion. Sheesh. But then I already write a ton of letters to India and always make sure to write out the month to avoid confusion.
Jeez, I didn’t think I needed to add a smiley in my post. That poster is in America, according to his profile. My response was said in jest.
(Although I honestly had no idea people in other countries actually *spoke *the order differently. I don’t think I’ve ever noticed that even though I watch a lot of British TV. I thought it was just how it was written.)