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You've fallen for one of the classic blunders. British January is indeed usually UTC, but that particular January was on British Standard Time.
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24bit colour wasn't invented after 2000. Given that the client application is written in VB, there's a good chance they are Windows CE devices. Those supported bit depths higher than 8-bit (256 colours) and so did the languages running on them; Even VB.
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Oh, and "colour"? Get with the tens already. The two thousand tens.
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As I recall, from 2010 to present, we Canadians still spell it with a U.
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"British Standard Time" - no, no, no - British Summer Time. It was an experiment to see whether it was better to have darker mornings and lighter evenings. It was just about getting light by 9 a.m. It was great.
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Sorry, but that's definently white. At least according to the code...
Captcha: enim - like enum - they should have used an enum
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That's the whole point. Those are strings; the numerical values have no real meaning.
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It's happening, thedailysnoofle is becoming reality
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I'm surprised that nobody has pointed out that the only colors supported by the client code are a subset of the CGA colors. This would explain the "Return Color.Orange 'bright yellow" line. CGA only supported red, green, blue, cyan, magenta, yellow, and white and black, in high and low intensities.
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I may be a pessimist, but I wouldn't be surprised if the same problem cropped up in 2090! :P
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Ah that's good then. We'll not convert colours to strings, we'll just serialize them into sequences of bytes that represent characters.
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Ha, you had me checking the HTML there.
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Language is always vague and fucksticks misinterpret things (usually deliberately) while pedants pick holes in the factuality of possible interpretations. If anyone reading this site was unable to decipher that nineties referred to the years between 1990 and 1999 (inclusive)....<insert finish to the sentence>
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"If anyone reading this site was unable to decipher that nineties referred to the years between 1990 and 1999 (inclusive).... ...they're talking about 60AD to 69AD..."
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I don't know why this is so hard for people to understand. Listen closely:
Gray is a color. Grey is a colour.
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Where I live we use this invention called a "curtain" which does an adequate task of ensuring that any room to which it is fitted can be made significantly darker than that of the ambient light-level outside. I've heard they're quite easy to make, although we also have places where you can exchange moderate quantities of money for a ready-made product, and you might even be able to get someone to help you install it, if for any reason it proves too difficult for you to do yourself.
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'Early 1990s' is pre-Windows 95.
Windows CE was initially released in 1996, so not really 'early 1990s'
There were colour handheld devices in the early 1990s, but they weren't common or cheap and didn't have big screens. Most things were B&W (eg Apple Newton, PalmPilot etc) with later ones advancing to greyscale towards the end of the 1990s. For specialised situations you may have had colour, but for most handheld applications the cost wasn't worth it.
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No, but it was rare in the early 1990s.
I remember seeing a VGA display for the first time (in around 1989 IIRC) - in a university computer lab. We all stood around admiring the quality of rendering of a scantily clad woman (including the professors)...
But, remember that VGA was not 24 bit colour. It was only 18 bit colour (3 x 6 bits) and that was from a 256 colour palette.
We had to wait a few more years before "true colour" (24 bit) became available as a standard feature on a desktop PC, and even then it was rare - and not on handheld devices until MUCH later.
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The real WTF (from the comments not the article) is that people think they can get more hours of daylight by adjusting their clocks (rather than setting their alarm clocks in summer time to get up an hour earlier).
I do know though that it is a very psychological thing. When I worked in Belgium for the whole summer of 1998, whenever I returned to England I kept my clocks in Central European Time (1 hour ahead of what it was in England). In particular it made getting up for early flights back much easier as my clock had its time an hour later than it really was. I did have to know to order the cab for the time it really was, not the time my clock said it was.
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By the way I'd file this article as a CodeSOD not a feature article which means we've had 3 CodeSODs this week.
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i appreciate the seriousness with which you treated my comments. next i expect a sincere appraisal of my suggestion that we all preface our comments with XML of global assumptions in the future.
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I don't see why it's necessary to specify a century on the date in this case. As the story involves computer, clearly it could not have been referring to the 1890s or any earlier century, as electronic computers had not been invented yet. And it cannot be referring to any century after the 1990s, as the world ended on December 21, 2012, so there are no future centuries.
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That's hardly some ancient, obsolete convention. When, for example, you start a new job, don't you typically refer to the time from when you start to 12 months later as "my first year at this job"? Or do you really call it "my zeroth year at this job"? If the latter, I think you're in a decided minority.
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Wow, you must have different memories of the 60s than I do. As I recall the decade started with Nero in power, and he was a terrible emperor! Then we went through Galba, Otho, and Vitellius in rapid succession. They were turbulent and violent times, full of uncertainty. I, for one, was glad when the 60s ended.
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It has to do with coordinating that effort with everyone around the world as well.
Sure, you can get up an hour earlier... but then what? Do you go to work earlier and leave earlier? What if you can't?
As developers and tech folk, that doesn't have a huge impact to us. But if your job depends on having an optimal amount of daylight (or lack there of), it sure as hell does.
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The first error case creates a valid input for the second function. If it ever gets to Purple something has definately gone out of plumb.
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I'm more baffled by
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"1977 Alvy Ray Smith implements first 24-bit red, green, blue (RGB) paint system Paint3 at the NYIT, for three E&S or Genisco frame buffers in parallel."
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Well, yes, of course at the time we called it the 800s (Anno Urbis). I was speaking proleptically.
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