Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Sunday, April 11, 1954

Subjective yes but mildly interesting (and boring) nonetheless.

From True Knowledge...
It occurred to us that with over 300 million facts, a big percentage of which tie events, people and places to points in time, we could uniquely calculate an objective answer to the question 'What was the most boring day in history?' For fun, we wrote a script to scan all days (from the beginning of the 20th century) and set it going.

‘Boring’ is a subjective term. A 14-year old has a very different idea of boring to a 45-year old. In this case we used the almost equivalent concept ‘uneventful’ and found the day when the smallest number of important things happened (or were happening).

When the script completed, we had an answer:

Most boring day in history
Sunday, April 11, 1954

Nobody significant died that day, no major events apparently occurred and although a typical day in the 20th century has many notable people being born, for some reason that day had only one person that might make that claim: Abdullah Atalar - a Turkish academic.

The irony is though, that having done the calculation, the day is now interesting for being exceptionally boring!

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