On 29/06/2022 18:17, Petro Ord wrote:
Corrections for times in the past are also welcome (e.g. for last winter), but note that "the wrong time" means that the local time indicated for the zone differs from the actual time that people in that region lived their lives by, e.g. transport departure and arrival times, store opening and closing times, work day start and end times, TV and radio programme start and end times, etc.
Fascinating how requirements differ for countries. For Crimea update a notice was enough
Alexander Krivenyshev wrote: http://voiceofrussia.com/news/2014_03_17/Crimea-to-switch-to-Moscow-Time-as- of-March-30-8334/ Thanks for the heads-up. That notice says that they'll switch to Moscow Time at 2pm, which means they'd advance their clocks by an hour once at 01:00 UTC (03:00 local time) and once again at 14:00 local time.
No transport departure and arrival times, no store opening and closing times, no work day start and end times, no TV and radio programme start and end times, etc., just a notice will do.
At that point it seemed most probable that the clocks would in fact change on March 30 (the Russian/pro-Russian forces had effectively been in control of the region for nearly a month at that point with no sign of change), so Paul released version 2014b on March 24 since it affected local time changes in the very near future. -- -=( Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk> || MEV Ltd. is a company )=- -=( registered in England & Wales. Regd. number: 02862268. )=- -=( Regd. addr.: S11 & 12 Building 67, Europa Business Park, )=- -=( Bird Hall Lane, STOCKPORT, SK3 0XA, UK. || www.mev.co.uk )=-