• Rekall IncorporatedOP
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          422 days ago

          yyyy.mm.dd does honestly makes by far the most sense. That being said, north america switching to day first would already be a massive achievement.

          • @bandwidthcrisis@lemmy.world
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            121 days ago

            I had emails from CVS (American pharmacy store) about vaccination records recently and noticed this

            Administration date 2024-10-25

            First time I’ve seen dates used like that in a public-facing context. The birth dates were in that form, too.

            The US uses metric measures in many places, too. Usually medical, but even things such as phone thickness are announced in ml.

            • @Exec@pawb.social
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              220 days ago

              but even things such as phone thickness are announced in ml

              Phone thickness in millilitres? I knew they have a hard time mixing metric with imperial but this is kind of ridiculous

        • @golli@lemm.ee
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          120 days ago

          I’d agree that yyy.mm.dd is probably the best for sorting reasons, but imo dd.mm.yyyy also has at least some logic in an everyday setting. Usually the order of relevance for everyday appointments is the day, then month, then year. Oftentimes the year has no informational value at all, since it is implied, e.g. for an upcoming birthday.

          • @C126@sh.itjust.works
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            120 days ago

            If you have an appointment you’ll need to know the month, so putting month first makes more sense.

            • @golli@lemm.ee
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              120 days ago

              Of course you also need to know the month, but similar to the year i would argue that there are plenty of times where the month is evident from context. So the informational value is lower than the day.

              I don’t want to argue that this is an absolute thing, but i’d say that quantitatively there are more times where you only need the day compared to very few times where you only need the month for example.