Time Zone How do I know what time zone is being used
#1
Posted 2017-February-15, 09:23
#2
Posted 2017-February-15, 11:01
But the tournament list also tells you how many minutes until the tourney starts. That doesn't depend on the time zone.
#3
Posted 2017-February-16, 08:03
barmar, on 2017-February-15, 11:01, said:
But the tournament list also tells you how many minutes until the tourney starts. That doesn't depend on the time zone.
Thank you. I watched the listings for a while and finally figured out what the cryptically labeled "Start" column referred to. Is there help for this kind of stuff (i.e., the meanings of the fields in lists like that)?
#4
Posted 2017-February-16, 08:07
#5
Posted 2017-February-16, 09:12
Vampyr, on 2017-February-16, 08:07, said:
Maybe in Europe you do, but I'll bet less than 1 in 10 Americans do. Mainly just people whose work involves dealing with overseas customers or colleagues on a regular basis.
#6
Posted 2017-February-16, 09:17
donsp, on 2017-February-16, 08:03, said:
We have a help system at
http://www.bridgebase.com/help/v2help/
which you can get to from the "Help" button at the top of the application. It doesn't explain the meanings of all the columns, I guess we assumed it was obvious.
#7
Posted 2017-February-16, 12:14
barmar, on 2017-February-16, 09:12, said:
Well, I knew this when I lived in America too. The information will show up,when you set the time on your computer or phone on any case.
Anyway it would be easy enough to find out, and then people wouldn't have to try to work out random time zones.
Don't most internet sites use GMT?
#8
Posted 2017-February-16, 14:37
Frequently drives me nuts, when the happy and clearly English site talks about things starting at 1400, and I have to guess whether they mean 0500 my time or 1400 my time. I'd assume the former, England being England and all, but sometimes the site is "helpful" in the background...
And yeah, given population densities (and East Coast Egotism) things aimed at a North American Audience are almost always set Eastern Time (", N:30 in Newfoundland", if you're in Canada). Sometimes they'll be nice to the other major population density and make it "8pm Eastern, 5 Pacific" (yeah, thanks).
What, bitter, me?
Oh, and GMT is dangerous (excellent, but dangerous). When am I GMT-6 (well, UTC-6, anyway) and when GMT-7? Should I know? Should you know? (Residents of Saskatchewan and Arizona can stop laughing now, TYVM)
#9
Posted 2017-February-16, 17:39
mycroft, on 2017-February-16, 14:37, said:
Frequently drives me nuts, when the happy and clearly English site talks about things starting at 1400, and I have to guess whether they mean 0500 my time or 1400 my time. I'd assume the former, England being England and all, but sometimes the site is "helpful" in the background...
And yeah, given population densities (and East Coast Egotism) things aimed at a North American Audience are almost always set Eastern Time (", N:30 in Newfoundland", if you're in Canada). Sometimes they'll be nice to the other major population density and make it "8pm Eastern, 5 Pacific" (yeah, thanks).
What, bitter, me?
Oh, and GMT is dangerous (excellent, but dangerous). When am I GMT-6 (well, UTC-6, anyway) and when GMT-7? Should I know? Should you know? (Residents of Saskatchewan and Arizona can stop laughing now, TYVM)
Well, if you have daylight savings time (I may be wrong but I think that Arizona residents are also laughing) then you adjust accordingly. You will probably notice whether you turn all your clocks forward.
#10
Posted 2017-February-17, 10:42
I'm currently working against India Standard Time. Because it's a 12.5 hour difference, remembering whether they're half an hour ahead of wallclock or half an hour behind (12 hour wallclock, obviously) is difficult at the best of times; the fact that they don't do DST makes it even better.
#11
Posted 2017-February-17, 11:33
#12
Posted 2017-February-17, 14:11
But I'm a science nerd with some math interest. I can't imagine most ordinary people working that out regularly. I also used to work for a company with an sister office in Phoenix; since Arizona doesn't have DST, we'd have to figure out whether we were 2 or 3 hours ahead of them at different times of year.
#13
Posted 2017-February-17, 15:31
#14
Posted 2017-February-17, 16:18
My second argument is that automatic translation can't be done for certain things; at that point explicitly putting the timezone on the time helps (as does using 24H clock, as does providing at least two timezones). Then at least the world clock becomes your friend.
My third argument is the one I use with clients: "Unless I state otherwise, any time I mention will be *your local*." That does tend to make it easier for me to compute time differences in my head, but only because I do it a lot. How relevant that is to BBO is arguable.
#15
Posted 2017-February-19, 14:16
The main benefit of putting the times in the tourney name is when you're looking at a list of all the recent ACBL tourneys, they won't all have the same names.