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October 2002, Week 4

HP3000-L@RAVEN.UTC.EDU

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From:
Wirt Atmar <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
[log in to unmask][log in to unmask] ,

WOULD YOU LIKE TO HAVE YOUR MESSAGE SEEN BY OVER
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Below is all the information you will ever need to market your product or
service over the Internet! [...]49_23Oct200211:40:[log in to unmask]
Date:
Mon, 28 Oct 2002 14:37:29 EST
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Michael (of Best Guess?) writes:

> Well my best guess is the tiny sliver of land where Afghanistan (UTC +4:30)
>  touches China (UTC +8).  China has a policy of having the entire country in
>  one time zone.  This assumes China goes on daylight savings, while
>  Afghanistan does not.

A silver cigar for Mike. His answer is closer than mine. The answer I was
going to give was Kazakhstan, but lo and behold, I find on closer inspection
that the relatively small country of Kazakhstan has three time zones where,
as Michael states, China has only one for the entire country. Everyone works
on Bejing time.

The 4 hour, 30 minute difference between Kazakhstan and China that I was
going to tout applies only to the western region of Kazakhstan, not the
eastern border where Kazakhstan abuts China, thus my answer is wrong. The
relatively large Delta Airlines map that I was referencing only shows one
time zone for all Kazakhstan, thus the bottom line is that Afghanistan and
China have the greatest time difference in the world, 3 hours, 30 minutes,
neither of which I believe go on daylight savings time.

Nonetheless, it does go to prove that time travel is possible. In a few
places on Earth, in just a step or two, you can go forwards or backwards in
time several hours.

Wirt Atmar

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