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#21
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"Cub Driver" wrote in message
... Boston is always GMT-4 or -5, and there are only two dates when the variable comes into play. Of course planes depart London on local time, not Zulu. The U.S. & Britain don't change summer/winter times necessarily on the same date. (I think the gap is most noticable in autumn.) (Or perhaps that's what you were saying? But as I recall, the autumn gap is a couple of weeks.) Nit - UK springs ahead a week before US. They fall back on the same date. -- David Brooks |
#22
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"Cub Driver" wrote in message
... Boston is always GMT-4 or -5, and there are only two dates when the variable comes into play. Of course planes depart London on local time, not Zulu. The U.S. & Britain don't change summer/winter times necessarily on the same date. (I think the gap is most noticable in autumn.) Hmmm... If we are offering the OP the strategy of converting all local times to UTC (which requires knowledge of local timezones and daylight savings rules), there is still an ambiguity. On the day the clocks go back, the local time of 0130 happens twice. Which occurrence do you use? Weighty matters indeed. -- David Brooks |
#23
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"David Brooks" wrote in message
... [...] On the day the clocks go back, the local time of 0130 happens twice. It's worse than that. Every local time between 0130 and 0230 happens twice. |
#24
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"Peter Duniho" wrote in message
... "David Brooks" wrote in message ... [...] On the day the clocks go back, the local time of 0130 happens twice. It's worse than that. Every local time between 0130 and 0230 happens twice. I only used that by way of example, and was hoping nobody would pick the nit. But it's actually 0100 to just-before-0200 that happens twice. Reminds me of a Car Talk stumper. In brief: two friends were talking on the phone, one in an East Coast state and one in a West Coast state. While talking they discover it's the same time for both of them. How come? The fact I bring it up in this thread is a big hint. Oh, they're both pilots. That's utterly irrelevant, but brings this back on-topic. -- David Brooks |
#25
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"David Brooks" wrote in message
... I only used that by way of example, and was hoping nobody would pick the nit. But it's actually 0100 to just-before-0200 that happens twice. I know...I was just checking to see if you knew. ![]() As far as nit-picking goes...I thought that's the point in the thread that we'd arrive at already. ![]() |
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