On Fri, 25 Jul 2014, Stephen Colebourne wrote:
Is there consensus on the list that all of these changes are better than what went before?
I think that these changes are a bad idea. As a general rule, I think that existing information should never be replaced by other information with the same or worse quality, but should only be replaced by information of greater quality. In other words, rules should be changed only when the new rules are clearly superior to the old rules. Even if the old rules are known to be inaccurate, they should be retained for the sake of stability until such time as more accurate information is known. I also prefer retaining at least one first class zone for each ISO3166 country, for ease of menu or map based selection, and to allow users to see that the selected zone name contains the name of a familiar city in their country. I think that some users will be upset to see a time zone name that contains the name of a city in another country, especially if the two countries have a history of conflict. The maintenance burden of making similar changes many times when many zones share modern history could be eased by new syntax in the input files, such as what was proposed by Andy Lipscomb in the "Extended data format" thread in September 2013; see <https://mm.icann.org/pipermail/tz/2013-September/019952.html> and other messages in the same thread. --apb (Alan Barrett)