| Simon, your understanding of the timestamp is the same as mine.  
Sorting by *Sent* is only as good as everyone's clock setting.  Not only do 
they have to have the time set correctly, but also their GMT offset as 
well.  Even then, I've seen some email on this list that was sent on 
January 1, 2000.  Go figure.   Dan Bale 
  -----Original Message----- From: Simon Coulter
 Sent: Mon 8/13/2001 8:33 PM
 To: midrange-l@midrange.com
 Cc:
 Subject: Re: getting list emails out of 
  order
 
 
 hHello Dan,
 
 You wrote:
 >The incoming mail is 
  being sorted date/time *received* and not by
 >*sent*.  Before last 
  week, I was sorting by *sent*, and it worked better
 >than *received* 
  sequence most of the time.
 
 If I recall correctly the SENT timestamp is 
  supposed to be GMT which would
 make it more reliable for sequencing than 
  received timestamp.  However, that
 relies on people having their 
  computer and/or mail program correctly
 configured and from what I see that 
  is not the case.  It seems that most
 people do not have their timezone 
  set correctly and thus their local time is
 interpreted as GMT which 
  basically stuffs up the entire sort process.
 (Notwithstanding mail 
  programs that pay no attention to the timezone setting
 anyway.)
 
 Of 
  course, that doesn't help with the vagaries of the Net where 
  different
 items may take different routes and thus later items may take a 
  faster route
 and arrive earlier (items in this sense are the complete mail 
  item rather
 than the TCP packets which may arrive in any order but are 
  reassembled and
 delivered in the proper order).  I see David mentioned 
  in another note that
 he is sending each item to 10 people at a time which I 
  think would
 contribute to the disordering 
  sequence.
 
 Regards,
 Simon 
Coulter.
 
 
 |