Quite right.  My WM-powered phone currently shows 16:48 as the time.

-Mike

[email protected] wrote:
FYI, any Windows Mobile powered phone will do both 24 hour format as well as ISO date format. They come default as 12 hour and mm/dd/yyyy but it's easily changed (just like Windows) via the Regonal Settings in the preferences.
    -------- Original Message --------
    Subject: [USMA:43062] Re: Hot and dry
    From: "Nat Hager III" <[email protected]>
    Date: Wed, February 18, 2009 12:38 pm
    To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>

    Google Android.  Note the analogue clock in the center and the
    tiny 24 h clock in the upper right.  (1:10)
http://edition.cnn.com/video/#/video/tech/2009/02/18/finighan.spain.google.phone.cnn Nat *From:* [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
    *On Behalf Of *Mike Millet
    *Sent:* Monday, 2009 February 16 2:11
    *To:* U.S. Metric Association
    *Subject:* [USMA:43028] Re: Hot and dry

    I've seen some Sprint and former Alltel phones that do 24 hour
    format. Incidentally, my iPhone detected that my Macbook Pro's
    clock was set to 24 hour format and automatically synced it over
    to my phone when I set it up so I'm good. There is a way to change
    it back in the settings but I just left it as is since it's easier
    for me to understand 24 hour format.

    Kind of off topic here but the local SIM card is a much cheaper
    option than getting roaming enabled. You basically become a
    subscriber of whatever carrier you happen to be on at the time and
    get a local number. Once I'm out of contract on my AT&T plan I
    will unlock my phone and just use it as my GSM phone for when I
    hopefully travel abroad.

    It'll be much easier once all the carriers start migrating towards
    LTE and you can have one phone with just a few different
    frequencies world wide, which should happen sometime after 2010 or
    2011. Or, knowing Verizon's corporate culture, when hell freezes
    over, whichever happens soonest.



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