On 2009-03-27_08:14:01, John Hasler wrote: > leo writes: > > my ISP ntp server is having problems with dayligth hour changes... > > NTP deals only in UTC. "Daylight savings" has no effect on it. > -- > John Hasler
OT question: I think the actual, underlying time data source for email time is the Unix time clock on the originator's host. This gets translated into a text string for insertion into the email. I think the format of this string is supposed to have time zone info in it, so it should be possible to know what the actual UTC time of sending was, but ... suppose you are looking at old emails in an archive. Suppose it matters to the minute when that old email was actually sent, like in a criminal or national intelligence investigation. Is there a database somewhere that records the dates of switching to and from summer time in each locale for each year in the past? For instance, time/dates from early March in the Mountain time zone were in MDT this year but should not be treated as MDT for the year 1980. How could an investigator, or historian/archivist, deal with this? I said OT up front, didn't I? -- Paul E Condon pecon...@mesanetworks.net -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org