As Peter Hullah wrote:
This change resulted from an original mail of mine which asked why Unix used MET when the rest of the European, English-speaking world uses CET. Central European Time is the generally accepted English-language term for the time zone of France, Germany etc. I (as an
Well, but only very few English native-speakers actually live in MET. So why don't you value the opinion of the people living here more than the opinion of `foreigners'?
English-speaking, - in fact, English. - European, informatician) applaud the use of CET and of CEST instead of CETDST. Any move back would reinstate a situation which is completely confusing to anyone who is used to the common name for this time zone.
My strongest point is still that you're simply not mighty enough to change the world. Your timezone package is great, but you by far don't constitute a majority in Unix installations -- and it's Unix what we are talking about here. So see my first mail, while it's arguable whether or not your are technically or politically or linguistically more correct, you break the tradition people got used to. Breaking tradition is almost always a Very Bad Thing, in particular if it's for nothing more than cosmetical reasons. Your naming might have been very acceptable 5 or 10 years ago, when the Unix world in Middle (Central, if you prefer) Europe still evolved, but right now, with a userbase of about a million or perhaps more: sorry, you're too late. Btw., the German does also have a word for `central', but doesn't call the timezone ``Zentraleuropäische Zeit'' either. Neither do the Danes. Perhaps that's why ``MET'' is more popular here. (MET DST looks a bit strange at the first glance, but the term `daylight savings time' is a so much better description than the term `summer time' so people tend to accept this name well.) Being faced with the opportunity to use a locally changed name in FreeBSD, we rather decided to approach you to revert your opinion. If we changed our zone name in the shipped systems, you wouldn't gain anything by it (except your personal pride, perhaps), but we'd have more hassles in maintaining your contributed software in our repository. Finally: the opinions expressed here are not only my own. Even without a straw poll, i know that other people have also been surprised by this change -- and that's not even with a _shipped_ system, but just only with the development version by now. -- cheers, J"org joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de -- http://www.sax.de/~joerg/ -- NIC: JW11-RIPE Never trust an operating system you don't have sources for. ;-)