Talk:lackey
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Julian Day. Typically used by astronomers (and the loose base for Star Trek's "stardate" calendar), when mapped to the Gregorian calendar, it's the raw number of days that have elapsed since Monday, January 1, 4713 BC. There's also some decimal thingy involved that I don't fully understand that also gives the time of day. Right now it's 2453308.89444 JD in Eastern time zone. --[[User:Southpaw018|Southpaw018]] 18:28, 30 Oct 2004 (MST) | Julian Day. Typically used by astronomers (and the loose base for Star Trek's "stardate" calendar), when mapped to the Gregorian calendar, it's the raw number of days that have elapsed since Monday, January 1, 4713 BC. There's also some decimal thingy involved that I don't fully understand that also gives the time of day. Right now it's 2453308.89444 JD in Eastern time zone. --[[User:Southpaw018|Southpaw018]] 18:28, 30 Oct 2004 (MST) | ||
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+ | Anyone else think that the way that H*R's puppet laughs at the end of the puppet show is similar to the way Kermit T. Frog used to laugh (when making similar jokes) on The Muppet Show? --[[User:CorruptPanda|CorruptPanda]] |
Revision as of 02:57, 18 December 2004
anyone have any thoughts on what "JD" stands for ?
Julian Day. Typically used by astronomers (and the loose base for Star Trek's "stardate" calendar), when mapped to the Gregorian calendar, it's the raw number of days that have elapsed since Monday, January 1, 4713 BC. There's also some decimal thingy involved that I don't fully understand that also gives the time of day. Right now it's 2453308.89444 JD in Eastern time zone. --Southpaw018 18:28, 30 Oct 2004 (MST)
Anyone else think that the way that H*R's puppet laughs at the end of the puppet show is similar to the way Kermit T. Frog used to laugh (when making similar jokes) on The Muppet Show? --CorruptPanda