In any case, for awhile, the date you picked depended on who you were writing to. And then also the relative standing. If he was of much lower standing you might force your own calendar on them.
Also, I think with the previous calendar it was always a bit debatable what year december belonged to. I can’t quite remember the details.
There was some of that indeed, depending on the centralization of the country e.g. Spain and France adopted the gregorian calendar wholesale because the king decreed it, but in less centralised countries like the Dutch Republic or Switzerland it happened by region (the seven catholic cantons switched to the gregorian calendar in 1584, the protestant canton only switched over piece by piece during the 18th century, and Schiers and Grüsch were the last remnants of Julian calendar in the entirety of western europe, only adopting the gregorian calendar in 1812).
... and then there's Sweden, which started on a plan to gradually approach the Gregorian calendar by skipping leap years over 40 years, except they immediately forgot to skip the second and third so concluded the plan was stupid, then instead of switching to gregorian they reverted to julian, before finally switching to gregorian 40 years after that.
And still use, in fact!
There are no computers, sensors, watches, or spaceships. There are also no TV-style distractions, and a lot more people are growing food. When would you notice that the longest day of the year is a few days away from what the books say it's supposed to be?
For that matter, the printing press was only a century old. How well-known was it that particular days are meant to be the longest or shortest of the year?
Some of the earliest things we have a sun-based calendar trackers, which need not be more complicated than a stick and a rock (meaning millions more have not survived).
Paradox's Clausewitz game engine seems to handle "negative" years very poorly, so stuff like historical Roman emperors in Crusader Kings have some oddities. It's probably also why Imperator: Rome uses ab urbe condita dating (aside from immersion).
The Elder Kings 2 mod actually has custom date handling (it's actually a custom date localisation system) to enable transitioning to the 3rd era on founding the Empire of Tamriel.
Checking the wiki, eu5 has an advance (guess these are like the nation ideas in eu4?) for Julian calendar which gives you +10% to orthodox or miaphysite nations. I doubt it has any effect in the calendar system in the games UI.
I use HTTPS only. I don't think HTTP is acceptable for anyone let alone a technical blog post. It takes a few minutes, and it prevents me and all your visitors from getting all kinds of MITM injections.
Thanks.
More annoying is the slightly shiny/shaded text that is supposed to highlight something. Who chose this style palette?
Millions of routers are compromised. BGP attacks happen. Anything http stands out as an interesting target for injection.
This position is foolish. It’s not a major ask to enable https.
You cannot browse to sites under any regime and execute code while expecting security to exist.
HTTPS on a blog does nothing. It doesn't protect you from anything. I guarantee you're not getting "all kinds of MITM injections" on this block of text. The only reasonable desire I can think of for "HTTPS everywhere" is hiding the content from your ISP but a) they still see the URL so they can get the content if they want it, and b) if you're so worried about that, use a VPN which coincidentally is even better because it will also hide the URL, and most importantly c) it puts the onus on you, the person who wants the thing, instead of hundreds or thousands or tens of thousands of text-only website owners who rightly couldn't care less about HTTPS.
You actually can’t guarantee anything of the sort. BGP hijacks are real.
That's incorrect, a MitM can only reveal the server hostname by inspecting the SNI during the TLS handshake, but the HTTP request, including the URL and headers, is encrypted.
With static webpages, the concern isn't someone snooping in on what I'm reading. It's someone injecting content, probably malware, into the page. Let's say I have a zero-click exploit for Chrome. What can I do with it? If I just stick it on a page I control, best I can hope for is spamming it all over the web and hoping someone clicks on it. Probably not a lot of impact before it gets patched. If instead, I can wait until some router firmware gets pwned, or an ISP, I can do a mass attack where I make all the vulnerable routers inject my exploit into all non-HTTPS web requests. Much greater exposure.
(This is a general remark, but it goes for a blog post like this as well.)
And the best Windows malware is actually digitally signed.
I don't remember turning it on but it's probable that I did, it's not a default yet but will be come October: https://blog.google/security/https-by-defau/