You do play FDS and Sega CD games, right? That is the only reason why I would get a NEW 3DS.Ew, no. Stahp it.
You do play FDS and Sega CD games, right? That is the only reason why I would get a NEW 3DS.
That extra power allows you to play Famicom Disk System games flawlessly.I prefer n3ds because extra power and buttons.
as long as people are stupidly dumb then not by muchOh no! N3DS price will rocket high again
I was thinking exactly that. Most of the world reads "1/12/2015" as "December 1st", except a few countries that only try to be original and not convenient, like the USA and countries that are too close to them to be able to avoid that format (Belize (and that one is still smart enough to also use D/M/Y), Micronesia)... and the Zimbabwe too, I don't have any explanation for that one.I'm pretty sure that 10.4 will be out long before December 1st.
Well in my opinion, both YMD and DMY formats are good (and use - or / I don't care). Because YMD is convenient to get things in the chronological order (like sorting photos that were named according to the time they were taken, or if someone travels in time and wants to know the date, well telling him the year first helps him better than telling him that we're the 6th, the 6th of what, when?). And DMY is convenient I'd say in everyday life, when you're supposed to know the month and year, so you only specifiy the day, or maybe the month when it's not obvious and the year last when really needed. Like "we'll meet on the 7th". Or "on 7/02" if it wasn't obvious it was February. And rarely "on 7/02/2017" because that's in a long time and you don't often make appointments for next year, that's why it isn't so useful to put year first when it's often irrelevant.
The Dogs love you!!! -> No more kennels!!!id downgrade now before 10.40 comes out cause if you softbrick then your either stuck with a brick or updating to 10.40 and not having kennel access any more
It's different in a conversation because the context implies the meaning. As you say, when we say "we'll meet on the 7th", the implication is that you mean the 7th day of the current month (edit - or the next month if the date in the current month has already passed the number you said...). Because we don't refer to months by number in spoken language, there is no confusion here (you wouldn't say "my birthday is in 07", you'd say "July"), and certainly in English we say "in" not "on" when referring to the year ("in 2017" not "on 2017"). All of these unspoken rules make it clear what you mean. But in written form there is more ambiguity, especially when the timescale is uncertain and the date is written only numerically, which is why a standardised format is neededWell in my opinion, both YMD and DMY formats are good (and use - or / I don't care). Because YMD is convenient to get things in the chronological order (like sorting photos that were named according to the time they were taken, or if someone travels in time and wants to know the date, well telling him the year first helps him better than telling him that we're the 6th, the 6th of what, when?). And DMY is convenient I'd say in everyday life, when you're supposed to know the month and year, so you only specifiy the day, or maybe the month when it's not obvious and the year last when really needed. Like "we'll meet on the 7th". Or "on 7/02" if it wasn't obvious it was February. And rarely "on 7/02/2017" because that's in a long time and you don't often make appointments for next year, that's why it isn't so useful to put year first when it's often irrelevant.
So once 10.4 comes out it's better to wait for KTM rather than risking a brick?
Then it would be better to have a hardmod installed before doing anything so you can backup your 10.3 sysnand. Then if downgrade bricks, you can restore to 10.3 using the hardmod instead of recovery mode.Damn, good thing i got my downgrade down on time. What if KTM does the same stuff as sysUpdater and forces you to Recovery Mode after 10.4 releases.... lmao rip
Big endian kind of makes sense (order of significance, like how we branch through menu's and find stuff in books etc.) but others disagree due to culture and stuff. My idea? Just spell out the month abbreviation and order then really doesn't matter and nobody's confused and pissy.