* Thomas S. Dye <tsd@tsdye.online> [2023-02-01 10:05]: > Aloha Jean Louis, > > Jean Louis <bugs@gnu.support> writes: > > > * Ihor Radchenko <yanta...@posteo.net> [2023-01-31 16:46]: > > > Specifying just @Europe/Berlin is ambiguous around the daylight > > > savings > > > transition. > > > > Sorry, I cannot see practical example why is it ambiguous. Unless > > programmer does not take all information in account, it is not > > ambigous. People on this planet agree on time zones in advance, so > > there are few changes that people cannot plan in advance. > > Please see Russia's plan to put Eastern Ukraine on Moscow time, and then > come back and argue that people on this planet agree on time zones in > advance: > > https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/27/world/europe/russia-ukraine-time-zones.html?smid=url-share
Then I have not expressed me enough specific. When I said "people", I definitely did not think "all people", as that is impossible. The agreement of "people" is summarized by standards of International Organization for Standardization (ISO) with ISO 8601 that includes specification and representation of time and time zones. There may be many disagreements on the world in relation to time zones, and if they do not align it for international standard, we do not need to consider it. While it may be specific disalignment problem in some country, their citizen must anyway resort to ISO again for calculations. We all rely on ISO standard. Not capricious decisions going behind that. -- Jean Take action in Free Software Foundation campaigns: https://www.fsf.org/campaigns In support of Richard M. Stallman https://stallmansupport.org/