>
> Not sure how I feel about showing users ISO 8601 formatted datetimes 
>> though. 
>>
> It is not a particularly human friendly datetime format.
>>
>
> It’s standard in Japan. And it *is* an international standard, after all. 
> Besides which, it makes logical sense.
>

Date and time formatting are usually subject to localization. If properly 
supported by a web application, switching the browser to a different locale 
- for example Japanese instead of US English - will also affect the 
formatting of dates and times.

The interesting question is whether Jupyter Lab supports localization of 
dates and times. If it doesn't, then the feature request should be about 
adding localization, not about changing the single supported date/time 
format to somebody else's preferences. There is no single format that will 
be to everybody's liking.

cheers,
  Roland

PS:  Don't argue with standards... I will NEVER say K-bi-byte! ;-)
https://xkcd.com/1179/

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