log in p&w

Micchan

Forum Fighter Guru
Your longest streak of consecutive log in (so at least one per day) in P&W

My streak is 450 days and counting, I know because is the age of my nation

 
Well, if it's log in then I'm pretty sure I have no chance of winning the most consecutive days

On the other hand, if it's about NOT logging in, I think I might have a chance...

 
245 days from creation to the freshman trip where I couldn't have a cellphone out. At 636 days old. I have missed logging in twice

 
I don't know. I've missed a few here and there because of life, school, etc.

Never bothered keeping track.

 
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Logged in for over 600 days and now I lost the streak for 4 minutes because it was offline all day  :middle:

 
I have only missed 4 days on logging in nation.

12/02/2017 - Server Outage

02/02/2018 - Server Outage

03/05/2018 - Server outage

Some correlation above. And

03/01/2018 - Stranded on a coach for 30 hours

 
In the United Statesdates are traditionally written in the "month-day-year" order, with neither increasing nor decreasing order of significance. This order is used in both the traditional all-numeric date (e.g., "1/21/18" or "01/21/2018") as well as in the expanded form (e.g., "January 21, 2016"—usually spoken with the year as a cardinal number and the day as an ordinal number, e.g., "January twenty-first, two thousand sixteen"), with the historical rationale that the year was often of lesser importance. The most commonly used separator in the all-numeric form is the slash (/), although the hyphen (-) and period (.) have also emerged in the all-numeric format recently due to globalization.

The day-month-year order has been increasing in usage since the early 1980s. Many genealogical databases and the Modern Language Association citation style use this format. When filling in the Form I-94 cards and new customs declaration cards used for people entering the U.S., passengers are requested to write pertinent dates in the numeric "dd mm yy" format (e.g. "19 07 22").


I don`t know why they changed to Month-Day-Year from when the British gave them Day-Month-Year but it is official in the USA

300 year difference, but the new format only started to get popular in the 1980s

 
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