I'd say it's simpler than any of that.  

Wikimedia Foundation need to synchronise the formal launch of projects with 
press announcements and availability of press contacts. I don't care whether 
that's done on GMT, EST, PST, BST, CET, MMA, BDSM, MI5 or any other timezone. 
What's important is we don't formally launch a new project with a big stonking 
banner on Wikipedia (hint: people do see those) and not have any press release 
or blog post up… journalists will be confused, bloggers will be confused, 
ordinary citizens of the Internet will be confused.

In fact, pretty much the only people who won't be confused will be people who 
have spent time keeping track of Wikimedia policy and governance stuff. Which 
is a pretty small group. And they won't even be able to say to the confused 
friends, bloggers, journalists etc. "Oh, here's a blog post from the Foundation 
which explains it" because there isn't a blog post or press release to point 
them to.

Not having press releases or blog posts out when a project is formally launched 
is about as big a failure of basic public relations/press handling as you can 
get. If a PR professional working for a commercial organisation failed to make 
material available for the press upon launch of a new product, that'd be 
grounds to rapidly dropkick them from the building. (I mean, it's not like the 
Foundation are formally launching new sister projects every other week like in 
the old days…)

Any plans to make sure things like this don't happen in the future?  

--  
Tom Morris
<http://tommorris.org/>


On Wednesday, 16 January 2013 at 05:52, Peter Southwood wrote:

> There are two immediately obvious possibilities for this.
> 1 GMT/Universal time, which would be relatively unsurprising to most, as  
> it is traditionally the zero offset timezone.
> 2 +12 so that New Zealand and other extreme east timezone users would  
> see something when the time arrives.
> A more complex option would be to link to the user's timezone and release  
> when that reaches the relevant time. This may not be feasible or even  
> particularly useful.
> Linking to a time zone which is tomorrow for half the world would be  
> counterproductive, better early than late.
> I would recommend GMT as least surprise option.




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