On Sunday, 6 October 2002 at 2002:10:06:09:26 (UTC +0100), William
Moore wrote:

T>> PS. I'm in east coast Australia so "tomorrow" probably means
T>> before breakfast for most of you, and if you're in the US, it
T>> means "today".

WM> Unless you live here in which case it's yesterday ;-)

Where is "here" for you?

My time zone is uTC + 1000 so noone can be more than two hours ahead
of me. As it's 1835 on Sunday 6 October here, it can't possibly be
later than 2002:10:06:20:35 anywhere on Earth.

So "today" means 6 October, "tomorrow" means 7 October (public
holiday in New South Wales). "Yesterday" is 5 October.

-- 
Tim
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Using The Bat! v1.61 on Windows 98 4.10 Build 1998  


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