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I think that is the plan.... The system will at some point store all date-time types as GMT (UTC 0), but will apply either *sys or *jobd UTC offsets to the dates as they are retrieved/stored. At this point, each job could run under its own UTC offset, allowing users in different timezones to see their correct time in their jobs. Eric DeLong Sally Beauty Company MIS-Project Manager (BSG) 940-297-2863 or ext. 1863 -----Original Message----- From: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Tom Jedrzejewicz Sent: Monday, October 30, 2006 10:38 AM To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion Subject: Zulu Time (was: Who else was awake at 2am this Sunday babysitting thetime change???) On 10/30/06, Holder, Ken <kkh@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Or even better (holding my breath) if we got ride of DST altogether (turning purple). OK (breathing again) not going to happen anytime soon.
Actually, as this discussion went on in various forms over the last few weeks, I started to wonder why the "local" time is used at all. I would think that every system should keep a standard time (i.e.Zulu time<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coordinated_Universal_Time>) and present it in local time. I would think this would be particularly useful for messaging systems, such as MQ. Any thoughts or comments?
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