From: Paul Lutus on
Bear Bottoms wrote:

/ ...

>> A clock is hardware...
>>
>>
> Dang...I said that wrong...a clock creates hard wear.

Indeed. :)

--
Paul Lutus
http://www.arachnoid.com
From: MC on
Hi!

> http://www.arachnoid.com/lutusp/worldclock.html

for France (Paris), this clock is wrong (for one hour).

--
@-salutations

Michel Claveau


From: Paul Lutus on
MC wrote:

> Hi!
>
>> http://www.arachnoid.com/lutusp/worldclock.html
>
> for France (Paris), this clock is wrong (for one hour).

Paris is in the CEST Time Zone, that is, GMT+1. Therefore my clock is
correct, but it is up to the user to set daylight time, because that is not
universally practiced in all locales, or in the same way, anywhere the
clock might be viewed.

After these issues have been addressed, if the clock is still wrong on your
computer, the problem lies with your computer's timekeeping, not the clock,
as explained in the help at the bottom of the page.

--
Paul Lutus
http://www.arachnoid.com
From: Olaf Greck on
Paul Lutus <nospam(a)nosite.zzz> wrote:

>MC wrote:
>
>> Hi!
>>
>>> http://www.arachnoid.com/lutusp/worldclock.html
>>
>> for France (Paris), this clock is wrong (for one hour).
>
>Paris is in the CEST Time Zone, that is, GMT+1. Therefore my clock is
>correct, but it is up to the user to set daylight time, because that is not
>universally practiced in all locales, or in the same way, anywhere the
>clock might be viewed.
>
>After these issues have been addressed, if the clock is still wrong on your
>computer, the problem lies with your computer's timekeeping, not the clock,
>as explained in the help at the bottom of the page.

<Quote>:
"First and most important, if World Clock is not displaying
the correct time or time zone for your location, the problem lies with
your computer, not World Clock. This is because World Clock relies
entirely on your computer's clock and time zone settings for its
display."
</Quote>:


What a lot of [but bad language here]!

Sorry Paul, but if you cannot program according to reality admit it
and do not blame the user for your programming skills.

Why do programmers always (well, often) try to tell to the user that
the program is right and the rest of the galaxy has to change the life
as we know it to make it fit the program?

best regards

Olaf

From: El Bandolero on
Il Sat, 23 Sep 2006 21:22:24 -0700, Paul Lutus ha scritto:

>> Is there a software to age the face of people ...
>
> Yes. It's called a clock. It always works :)

Actually when media publish simulation, as lost children, as they could be
NOW, they say that is made using some computer software
not just adoBBe photoshock, but a specific software to age the faces of
people ;-)

--
ciao
Bando
http://www.godisimaginary.com/
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