996015600
Converting Unix timestamp 996015600 using our Time Converter gives us the following information:
996015600 is representing the 204 day of the year 2001 in the Gregorian calendar, having 365 days. There are 161 days left of the year and this particular timestamp falls on a Tuesday, July 24 of week 30 at 23:00 UTC in the afternoon meaning that about 96% of the day has passed. At this specifc time, the moon was in its Waxing crescent phase, about 227,600 miles (or 366,286 km) from Earth.
On this day, many notable and historically important events have taken place. But to only mention a few, in year 1132, Battle of Nocera between Ranulf II of Alife and Roger II of Sicily. And later in 1148 Louis VII of France lays siege to Damascus during the Second Crusade. More recently, in 2019 Boris Johnson becomes Prime Minister of the United Kingdom after defeating Jeremy Hunt in a leadership contest, succeeding Theresa May.
We've also, tragically, seen a few famous deaths throughout history on this day. One notable mention is in 759 when Oswulf, king of Northumbria passed away and in 811 when Gao Ying, Chinese politician (born in 740) left us. And more recently, Dmytro Kiva, Ukrainian engineer and designer (born in 1942) who died in in 2024.
July 24, or 996015600, is also a day that we should celebrate. This date marks the birth of many influential people throughout history, including Christina von Stommeln, German Roman Catholic mystic, ecstatic, and stigmatic (died in 1312) who was born in 1242, and later in 1468 - Catherine of Saxony, Archduchess of Austria (died in 1524). More recently, Nicole Pircio, Brazilian rhythmic gymnast who was born in 2002.
Conversion help
For your conveniance, we have listed the conversion syntaxes for 996015600 timestamp to serveral of the most popular programming lanugages below.
PHP | date('Y-m-d H:i:s', 996015600); |
MySQL | select from_unixtime(996015600); |
JavaScript | new Date(996015600*1000).toString(); |
C++ | time_t epch = 996015600; printf("%i -> %s", epch, asctime(gmtime(&epch))); (time.h); |
C# | String.Format("{0:d/M/yyyy HH:mm:ss}", new System.DateTime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0).AddSeconds(996015600)); |
Java | new SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy HH:mm:ss").format(new Date(996015600 * 1000L)) |
Ruby | require 'date' DateTime.strptime("996015600",'%s') |
Binary | 11101101 01110111 11110111 110000 |
Hexadecimal | 3b5dfdf0 |
A few related timestamps to 996015600 are: