Posted by Dennis M on December 30, 2009, 2:58 pm
Posted by Dennis M on December 30, 2009, 10:11 pm
>Dennis M wrote:
>> Everything's the same.
>Including my appointments?
<shrug> I don't deface mine, or if I do I do it in light pencil or with a
post-it note.
Just thought there might be some others like me who like to buy
special-interest calendars which can go for $10, usually more.
Posted by BillGill on December 31, 2009, 9:14 am
Dennis M wrote:
> Everything's the same.
Well, the actual number for an exact repeat of the calendar is 27
years. There may be some repeats in between, I'm not about to sit
down and figure it out, but you will always get repeats at 27.
Bill
Posted by Jamie on December 31, 2009, 5:09 pm
> > Dennis M wrote:
> > > Everything's the same.
> > Well, the actual number for an exact repeat of the calendar is 27
> > years. There may be some repeats in between, I'm not about to sit
> > down and figure it out, but you will always get repeats at 27.
> > Bill
> Or maybe not, Bill. Just wait another six years and check again.
> You're going to be late for a lot of appointments by a few years.
> 2009 current year + 11 years
> 2015 6 years after + 6 years
> 2026 17 years after + 11 years
> 2037 28 years after + 11 years
> 2043 34 years after + 6 years
> 2054 45 years after + 11 years
> 2065 56 years after + 11 years
Prior to 2009:
1998: 11 years earlier
1987: 11 years earlier
1981: 6 years earlier
This is as far I back as I can recall
Posted by Jim Prescott on December 31, 2009, 5:36 pm
>Dennis M wrote:
>> Everything's the same.
>Well, the actual number for an exact repeat of the calendar is 27
>years. There may be some repeats in between, I'm not about to sit
>down and figure it out, but you will always get repeats at 27.
There are only 14 possible calendars. Get one of each and then
you are all set.
--
Jim Prescott Edmund A. Hajim School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
jgp@seas.rochester.edu University of Rochester, NY
>> Everything's the same.
>Including my appointments?