On 11 Mar 1999, John Goerzen wrote: [snip]
> > Although it might seen as a logical conclusion to say that 12:00 pm is noon, > > the argument doesn't hold, because `pm' has a precise definition. It means > > "when any given star has _crossed_ the meridian" > > Which it will have by the time you are able to write either the AM or > the PM. Speaking of one precise instant in time is pointless; it is > gone in an infinately small amount of time. Trying to confuse the > issue, and everyone, by doing this is silly. Nitpicking like that is > unnecessary, and you are not correctly stating either my statement or > the one to which I was replying. Agreed... where do these threads come from? lack of linux related problems to stimulate your minds... Sorry, I just read the whole thread with amusement. Anyway, put it this way: Midnight Noon Midnight 12:00 12:01AM - 11:59AM 12:00 12:01PM - 11:59PM 12:00 And if there is any problem with that, speak now or ... (the above is not my understanding, (although it is now) I deduced it from the thread.) The whole AM/PM issue to me is not related to the current time, i.e. 12:01PM does not mean 12 hours and 1 minute after noon to me, it means that it is 12:01 in the second half of the day. Michael Beattie ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) PGP Key available, reply with "pgpkey" as subject. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- "42? 7 and a half million years and all you can come up with is 42?!" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Debian GNU/Linux.... Ooohh You are missing out!