dunno001 said:
Thank you, for someone FINALLY knowing the proper usage of decades. (And thus, I would assume, century, millennium, etc.) (The rest of this post is in general, and not directed at anyone, especially zexen, who did get it right.) Just because something is on Wikipedia does not mean it is correct. It is a common misconception that the century began in 2000. As zexen alluded to, yes, a century can begin there, but not the 21st of the AD calendar system. A common use of decades and centuries are things like the 1800s, the 1930s, etc. Yes, they are what we call them, but they are not the definitive lines of the AD calendar. To those who insist that "this millennium" started in 2000, I propose this question: What was the year range of the millennium that contained the year 684? 1492? 2010? Remember that a year can't be in 2 of "the millennium" at the same time. (Though it will, by definition, exist in 1000 different ranges of a millennium.) Back to the topic, big changes to the decade of the 2000s (referencing 1/1/2000 to 31/12/2009) in my eyes are: -Explosion of console online gaming. I can't say some of the other things started in this range. The graphics rush started in the 90s, console (and company) fanboyism dates to the 70s, console disk media is 90s... |
Wikipedia is not that unreliable.
And there's no right way of counting years like this article from Wikipedia (yes) is explaining:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium#Counting_years
You gotta love Wikipedia.