Nov. 3, 2016
8:47 a.m.
On 11/03/2016 08:27 AM, Alexander Belopolsky wrote:
Isn't this problem worse with the UTC offset?
Only if one assumes that a time zone abbreviation reflects the user's location, so that VLAT means "Vladivostok time, whatever that happens to be". In English the usual assumption is that a time zone abbreviation reflects the user's UTC offset, so that CST means "US Central Standard Time, 6 hours behind UTC", even if one's location is Mérida (which is not in the central US or even in central North America). A numeric abbreviation matches this usual assumption better than VLAT does.