ÎÏÎÏ 04/ÎÎÏ/2005, ÎÎÎÏÎ ÎÎÏÎÏÎÎÏÎ ÎÎÎ ÏÏÎ 10:23, 
Î/Î Markus Kuhn ÎÎÏÎÏÎ:
> Simos Xenitellis wrote on 2005-02-14 23:19 UTC:
> > officially in Greece we have the 12-hour clock
> 
> Even in formal written communication, e.g. on bus/train time tables and
> airport tickets? I have a hard time believing that.
> 
> What does "officially" mean? Does Greece have any other standard for
> time notation than ELOT EN 28601?

I wonder if you actually have a copy of ELOT EN 28601 as we don't have.
Perhaps you have a copy of the 28601 European Standard?

My source is the EU Publication service, at
http://publications.eu.int/code/el/el-4100800el.htm

> Is a significant fraction of the Greek population unfamiliar with what
> 23:59 means?

I would answer empirically here as I do not have statistical
information. In everyday life people use the 12-hour notation.

Do a search for "ÎÎ" (see below) on Google:
http://www.google.com/search?q=%CE%BC%CE%BC&sourceid=firefox&start=0&start=0&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:el-GR:official

You get over 500.000 hits. "ÎÎ" is not used as shortcut for something
else, so almost all hits count.

> How do you write AM and PM traditionally using the Greek alphabet?

am/AM is ÏÎ/ÎÎ (ÏÏÎ ÎÎÏÎÎÎÏÎÎÏ)
pm/PM is ÎÎ/ÎÎ (ÎÎÏÎ ÎÎÏÎÎÎÏÎÎÏ)

> Why would you want to go back to something as broken and troublesome as
> the 12-h time-of-day notation on a computer?

I am trying my best for my language. 

If you can retrieve either standard:
a. ELOT EN 28601
b. European Standard 28601
I would be happy to read them and figure out what is better.

> Exercise: When is 12:00 AM today?
That was about 4 hours and a half ago.

I am cc:ing a Greek mailing list. Anyone has any contact at all with the
guys at elot.gr to help out...?

Simos


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