In message <199611262146.WAA14614@uriah.heep.sax.de>, J Wunsch wrote:
As Markus G. Kuhn wrote:
- I hardly ever have seen MET and METDST used anywhere outside the Unix
But we _are_ in the Unix world. Our ``target market'' is not outside, but inside this world.
The time zone string CET or MET is never parsed by any software, because in all applications (e-mail, news, etc.) the time format standards require that a numeric local time - UTC offset is also provided (e.g., required by RFC822 except for US names) and the numeric value is then used. Therefore, MET->CET is no compatibility problem. Consequently: Only humans have to recognize the time zone abbreviation and it definitely does not make sense here to use one that does not follow common practice (Langenscheid, PTB, SkyTV, CNN, etc.).
Sorry, i can't remember you starting a discussion in de.comp.os.unix. That's where those affected by your decision can be found. Why didn't you ask there what people would prefer?
May be you simply read the wrong groups. A large MET->CET discussion took place in de.comp.standards and CET was after a brief exchange of arguments quite quickly the common consens. Give me around 48 hours, then I have some time to start a small educational flame war in de.comp.os.unix. I think, I am quite good at this ... ;-) Let's see in two weeks again what the USENET mob thinks then.
The American Indians don't really live in India, but changing this name after years of usage wouldn't make sense, either.
Here you really have very litte idea of what you are talking about: They are called "Native Americans" today. Political correctness ideology requires the Americans to change terminology every ten years and believe me, they are quite good at this! Markus -- Markus G. Kuhn, Computer Science grad student, Purdue University, Indiana, USA -- email: kuhn@cs.purdue.edu