On 2023-03-28 00:46:13 (+0800), Howard Hinnant via tz wrote:
Recent events have brought to my attention the need to put a damper on chaos caused by poor planning. When governments give little notice to changes in time zone rules, this is not a problem that this group can fix, or should even try.
I propose a minimum period of 30 days between successive IANA tz database releases. The train leaves the station no more frequently than once every 30 days (and will probably be less frequent). Whatever information is solid before the release date makes it on the train. Otherwise it can wait another 30 days (at least).
My recommendation is in part based on this common statement:
Poor planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on my partThis week’s chaos isn’t unusual. In fact it is normal, especially for some countries. If they can’t be bothered to make a plan in advance and stick with it, I don’t see why this group of volunteers needs to compensate for that. Let the politicians lie in the beds they make.
I also disagree with this proposal.
While I am sympathetic to your reasoning, I believe it is flawed. This project exists to record the reality on the ground, not to attempt to influence it. In this instance, poor planning on [your] part sadly does constitute an emergency on [our] part.
On the bright side, as a volunteer project, we are under no obligation to respond to emergencies in a timely manner. We don't have to put out the fires. We merely have to record when they happen. We don't make any commitments about how soon we respond to emergencies. We shouldn't make any commitments about how much time needs to pass between emergencies.
Philip
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Philip Paeps
Senior Reality Engineer
Alternative Enterprises