It makes an even better job than the Gregorian calendar when it comes to approximating the calendar to the solar year.

  • kava@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    look at the chaos that Y2K was. one doesn’t simply adopt a new calendar.

    it’s too ingrained. it’s like ripping out the foundations of a house to build a new one. it would have to be one hell of a calendar

    • Phil_in_here
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      1 month ago

      There is a pretty fucking solid one:

      13 months exactly 4 weeks long. 364 days. Two unique days: New Years Day and Leap Day. Just put them together.

      Now every month is the same length. Every numbered day is the same day of the week in every month for the whole year.

        • Phil_in_here
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          1 month ago

          Yeah, that’s the one. The one that makes a modicum of sense

        • Phil_in_here
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          1 month ago

          Either A) New Years Day is a day of the week and your birthday changes every year (but in a vastly more predictable way; NYD will make next year’s dates one weekday ahead), or B) New Years Day is a completely separate day and all years are identical, and you choose your birthday to be celebrated on the closest agreeable weekend if that matters to you

    • CMLVI@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Yeah. There aren’t any REAL issues with the current calendar. Months aren’t equal, we have leap year. But it doesn’t break anything, it’s just annoyances you live with.