happy 1_700_000_000 everyone!
a rare Unix timestamp occurred yesterday.
next one (1_800_000_000) will be in 2027.
edit: seems like Lemmy doesn’t like video links in pictures field. so pasted it below.
a rare Unix timestamp occurred yesterday.
next one (1_800_000_000) will be in 2027.
edit: seems like Lemmy doesn’t like video links in pictures field. so pasted it below.
konalt, ![]()
Cutting it a bit close there.
lemmesay, ![]()
yes lol. became anxious fearing I’d miss it and hence made typos :')
Gork, Nothing existed prior to January 1, 1970.
It is known.
PlasticExistence, It is known.
TimeSquirrel, ![]()
From the atomic age into the information age. That date is a good marker.
ininewcrow, ![]()
*Disinformation Age
The Information Age appeared for a brief moment and went straight into the Disinformation Age
018118055, End of universe, 2038.
TeamBrett, I imagine all timestamps are rare. I.e only one exists of each until there is a rollover.
Aabbcc, Had to explain Unix time to my friends when I sent them a picture of 1696969420
RAM, 🥳🥳🥳
018118055, I’ve been using Linux since 1996 and remember when time_t was less than a billion. I guess I’ve found a new way to date myself. Slightly interestingly I thought, 1 billion was a couple of days before 9/11 which some have said defines the modern era or epoch.
jeena, ![]()
Hooray we did it!
palordrolap, Fun fact: If your shell is Bash or supports the same feature(s),
date
technically isn't needed;printf '%(%s)Tn'
works the same.Yes, that is a
date
/strftime
-style percent escape inside a specific parentheticalprintf
percent escape.
bamboo, What shell is this that it outputs the duration after exiting the loop? Looks nifty.
lemmesay, (edited ) ![]()
it’s starship. you should check it out if you don’t have a handcrafted prompt.
edit: shell is bash. just with a custom prompt in .bashrc.
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