2002-06-01 What is your long date set to? That is the one that will appear in the Original Message heading. Make sure it is in the form:
dddd, yyyy-MM-dd This will give you the form of Saturday, 2002-06-01 Also, if that can't be resolved, check with a local person who understands computers. Make it known to him that you have the regional settings set properly, but the result is the US format. Make sure he understands that US users who have changed their defaults to ISO-8601 settings have the correct display. Try changing to Dutch or German and see if it makes a difference. Just as a test. Have friends and or relatives change their settings and send test messages back and forth and see if what the result is. It all else fails, go to the Microsoft website and to the support section and send an email message indicating you have this problem and what they suggest you should do to correct it. It has to work for you if it works for me and others. It must be some simple oversight. Don't give up! Keep trying. John ----- Original Message ----- From: "Han Maenen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Saturday, 2002-06-01 04:25 Subject: [USMA:20311] Re: Correction of message USMA 20249 > I simply have no clue why both my computers, that did not even default to US > settings, should send them in e-mails. I put this question to the ISO 8601 > list some time ago, but they could not offer any solution. Many of its > members have the same kind of problem. > My old and new computers defaulted to Dutch settings. I see correct and > incorrect headers in messages coming from other list members at random. My > own headers shown as "Original Messages" within the messages are also at > random. > Under the Dutch settings I changed the short date format to YYYY-MM-DD. In > the time settings I left the AM and PM fields empty. Otherwise they are 24 > h. > One thing is certain: I do not want to use MM-DD-YYYY and AM/PM. My BIOS > uses US settings, however. And I do not dare to change them; the BIOS itself > offers no option to do it. Suppose I try to flash an update, and my computer > crashes while flashing? That risk and that price is too high. If the problem > is caused by my computer, I simply will have to put up with it, just as we > are forced to put up with dpi and xx inch screens for the time being. > > Han > Historian of Dutch Metrication, Nijmegen, The Netherlands > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "kilopascal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Sent: Friday, May 31, 2002 11:52 PM > Subject: [USMA:20285] Re: Correction of message USMA 20249 > > > 2002-05-31 > > Han, > > I use both Outlook Express and IE6, not Eudora. And my headers are > correct. > > John > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Han Maenen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Sent: Tuesday, 2002-05-28 15:30 > Subject: [USMA:20254] Correction of message USMA 20249 > > > John and all, > > Correction from USMA 20249: > > The clock and date down on the right side of the screen are ISO 8601. The > clock says 07:22, not 7:22 when writing this. Putting the mouse pointer over > the clock shows the date in ISO 86021 format. I have also checked the > headers of my e-mails. > > > > should be > > > > The clock and date down on the right side of the screen are ISO 8601. The > clock says 07:22, not 7:22 AM while writing this message. Putting the mouse > pointer over the clock shows the date in ISO 8601 format. I have also > checked the headers of my e-mails. > > > > I wonder, you use Eudora 5.1, I use Outlook Express, attached to IE 6. Might > that be the cause of wrong time-and date settings popping up in e-mail > headers? Might some invisible settings in OE be overriding Windows > preferences? > > > > Han > Historian of Dutch Metrication, Nijmegen, The Netherlands > >
