Chuck Soper <chucks2@veladg.com> writes:
Should the current official time zone abbreviations be used rather than the popular ones?
That could be. I reran the AltaVista queries that I used on 2001-04-05 (and documented in "australasia") and got quite different results this time: 548 "Eastern Summer Time" AND domain:au 181 "Australian Eastern Summer Time" AND domain:au 10,200 "Eastern Daylight Time" AND domain:au 3,740 "Australian Eastern Daylight Time" AND domain:au 2,130,000 "EST" and domain:au 133,000 "EDT" and domain:au 7,070,000 "AEST" and domain:au 1,900,000 "AEDT" and domain:au 161,000 "CST" and domain:au 26,100 "CDT" and domain:au 482,000 "ACST" and domain:au 265,000 "ACDT" and domain:au 153,000 "WST" and domain:au 545,000 "AWST" and domain:au To double check this I ran similar queries on Google, and got the following approximate hit counts: 216,000 "Eastern Summer Time" site:.au 228,000 "Australian Eastern Summer Time" site:.au 105,000 "Eastern Daylight Time" site:.au 97,800 "Australian Eastern Daylight Time" site:.au 7,730,000 "EST" site:.au 353,000 "EDT" site:.au 15,600,000 "AEST" site:.au 1,440,000 "AEDT" site:.au 433,000 "CST" site:.au 48,100 "CDT" site:.au 488,000 "ACST" site:.au 372,000 "ACDT" site:.au 600,000 "WST" site:.au 495,000 "WST" site:.au This indicates that (on the web, at least) there's been a decisive shift from "summer time" to "daylight time" in Australia, and a shift from abbreviations like "EST" or "EST/EDT" to abbreviations like "AEST/AEDT". Would any other Australians care to chime in on this? Is there a sense that the American-style time zone terminology has taken over from the British in the last five years?
Perhaps, the older tz abbreviations without the "A" for Australia could be maintained for dates in the past similar to using PWT (Pacific Wartime) for Pacific Time?
The PWT/PDT transition is easy, since it's just the end of the war. But as far as I know switching from EST to AEST would be tricky, since there's no specific point at which the switchover could be said to have occurred. Unless there's some official time stamp somewhere (some law or regulation establishing the abbreviations, perhaps?).