Even this model?

http://shop.vzw.com/?id=Verizon+Wireless+XV6900+PDA/Smartphone&section=1

(God this would PO me if this was hardwired to AM/PM-only)  

Nat

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Michael Palumbo
Sent: Wednesday, 2009 February 18 16:49
To: U.S. Metric Association
Cc: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:43065] Re: Hot and dry


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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