User:Robert Thorpe/World Alphabetical Time: Difference between revisions

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Wouldn't it be convenient to have a world standard time which we could use when communicating across different time zones, without the need for all that tedious arithmetic (assuming you can remember whether to add or subtract)?  One way would be to create World Alphabetical Time, where it would always be the same time everywhere in the world.  Television news channels could adopt it, so we would soon get used to it.
Wouldn't it be convenient to have a world standard time which we could use when communicating across different time zones, without the need for all that tedious arithmetic (assuming you can remember whether to add or subtract)?  With World Alphabetical Time, it would always be the same time everywhere in the world.  Television news channels could adopt it, so we would soon get used to it.


There being 24 letters in the alphabet which do not resemble numbers - I and O would not be used - and 24 hours in the day, everyone could learn to apply WAT to their local time.  It would end the need for tedious lists of cities with different times.
There being 24 letters in the alphabet which do not resemble numbers - I and O would not be used - and 24 hours in the day, everyone could learn to apply WAT to their local time.  It would end the need for tedious lists of cities with different times.

Revision as of 18:07, 13 October 2007

Wouldn't it be convenient to have a world standard time which we could use when communicating across different time zones, without the need for all that tedious arithmetic (assuming you can remember whether to add or subtract)? With World Alphabetical Time, it would always be the same time everywhere in the world. Television news channels could adopt it, so we would soon get used to it.

There being 24 letters in the alphabet which do not resemble numbers - I and O would not be used - and 24 hours in the day, everyone could learn to apply WAT to their local time. It would end the need for tedious lists of cities with different times.

Since Universal Time (alias UCT or GMT) is used as a sort of default when comparing with other time zones, WAT could be pegged to it, so that A:00 would be 0000 UTC. Thus my current time, Portuguese (also British, Irish) Summer Time 18:49 (17:49 UTC, 12:49 CDT) is T:49 WAT, wherever I am and wherever you are.

A small way to improve the world, but a real improvement. Robert Thorpe 12:49, 13 October 2007 (CDT)