I will expect you all to be present. Punching people and dancing.
(http://www.sylpher.com/12023Showl.jpg)
Oh sure, I'll hop in my rocket and come right over!
I like the flyer design, but why do you only get to play for a 1/2 hour??
C.
lol :)
which is the 18th month?
Flesktember? hehe
sorry - dutch humor I guess
but yeah, why only half an hour?
:p
That is just what they gave us...there will be 5 or so other bands and it starts at 7 so if it is meant to end at a decent hour then half an hour chunks with 15 min setup times is in order I suppose.
Crap! I'm the only one who lives in AZ besides Sylpher and I can't go!
I'll go.
This is in Montreal, right?
/me poops after reading the subject.
lol@N3Tgraph
those silly people outside of holland write month/day/year and not day/month/year :P
yeah,
how unlogical can they be? ;)
Heh in Chinese we usually write in this order: year->month->day, but in English (we followed British conventions) we write d-m-y.
hey that's the dutch way too 8)
pretty neat
And in Chinese your address goes country-state-city-suburb-street-number, in reverse order to ours. Whee. I actually learned something in my Chinese class. Too bad it won't actually help me pass the test :-\
- Punch
Hey, I also know some chinese:
Ni Hao - which stands for hi! ;)
that ofcourse next to:
babi pangang
fuyong hai
etc etc :)
/me is no good in Mandarin and Chinese written in English alphabets is actually very difficult for him to dicypher, so he only knows what "Ni Hao" is within all those netgraph posted...
chinese food :)
I always thought year/month/day makes the most logical sense. I put the date in that format at the beginning of all filenames on my computer so when I sort by date they're actually in the correct order (otherwise 17 April 2003 comes right after 17 April 2002). Here in the US though we use month/day/year, which I guess is sort of nice since it's how you pronounce it in speech.
It depends, we use y/m/d because that's how we pronounce them normally.