On Sat, 5 May 2001 16:46:46 -0400, Chris Nandor said: > Hi all. Just as an FYI, my only purpose on this list is to keep reminding > people that not all machines calculate dates in the same way. For example, > the epoch on Mac OS begins at Jan 1, 1904 LOCAL TIME instead of Jan 1, 1970 > GMT. When does it end? I assume it is not the same length as the Unix epoch, or it would already be over. -- Rich Bowen - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://geeks.cre8tivegroup.com/ --- Work http://www.rcbowen.com/ --- Play
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time modul... Martijn van Beers
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time m... Rich Bowen
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time m... Abhijit Menon-Sen
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/T... Rich Bowen
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time modules Dan Brian
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time modul... Martijn van Beers
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time modul... srl
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time modul... Rich Bowen
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time modules Chris Nandor
- Re: Mac Epoch: Was Re: Grand Unified Theory of ... Rich Bowen
- Re: Mac Epoch: Was Re: Grand Unified Theory... Chris Nandor
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time modules Abhijit Menon-Sen
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time modules Rich Bowen
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time modules Abhijit Menon-Sen
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time modul... Rich Bowen
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/Time m... Abhijit Menon-Sen
- Re: Grand Unified Theory of Date/T... srl
- Time Zones: Was Re: Grand Unified ... Rich Bowen
- Re: Time Zones: Was Re: Grand ... Abhijit Menon-Sen
- Re: Time Zones: Was Re: Grand ... srl
