Timezone Maintainer Retiring 198
linuxwrangler writes "It's used in Java. It's used in nearly every flavor of UNIX/Linux. In PostgreSQL, Oracle and other databases. Several RFCs refer to it. But where does the timezone database come from? I never gave it much thought but would have assumed that it was under the purview of some standards body somewhere. It's not. Since the inception of the database Arthur David Olson has maintained the database, coordinated the mailing list and volunteers and provided a release platform and now he is retiring. IANA is developing a transition strategy. Jon Udell has an interesting literary appreciation of the timezone database."
Definition of awesome (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Definition of awesome (Score:5, Insightful)
Outstanding (Score:4, Insightful)
The "literary appreciation" article is really first rate.
bored legislators (Score:5, Insightful)
The database itself is updated approximately twenty times per year, depending on the year, based on information these experts provide to the maintainer.
Governments of the world have too much time on their hands if they average fiddling with local time zones 20 times per year.
Re:fuck timezones (Score:4, Insightful)
now is the time to replace timezones with a countdown...
Yes...the Final Countdown!
Stupid humans, why do we still need this crap? (Score:5, Insightful)
No disrespect to the man and the effort that must have gone in to creating this, but from a rational perspective we shouldn't need more than one more update ever. Unfortunately as a population we seem to be far too dumb to handle the idea of moving away from something we've done for a long time to something that makes more sense.
Here's all we need for a logical, permanent time solution:
I'm sure there are a few odd cases where exceptions to these guidelines would make sense, and I'm not against it in those cases, but the way we handle time zones now is completely irrational.
Re:Definition of awesome (Score:5, Insightful)
But the other scary part is any random bus could have run over this guy any time in the past, and
nobody seems to have been prepared for that.
One wonders how many other situations like this exist, where critical system tools are basically handled by one person, or a tiny group. This is the second time in the last few years where I've been made aware of such a thing. When Reiser went to prison an entire file system essentially died on the vine (yes I still use it on some machines). So apparently it happens more often than we expect.
The worrisome bit is that we probably don't have any good database of critical component maintainers and their backup maintainers. The guy who maintained that database probably DID get hit by a bus.
Re:Stupid humans, why do we still need this crap? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Stupid humans, why do we still need this crap? (Score:5, Insightful)
At least with time zones (as fucked up as the current system is), you can travel anywhere, set your clock to the local time and have a general estimation of the day. Wake up at 6-7am, eat lunch at noon, supper at 5 or 6, go to bed around 11. Makes things much easier on our dumb little brains.
Re:Stupid humans, why do we still need this crap? (Score:4, Insightful)
maybe i'm just a decadent libertine, but i generally eat when i'm hungry, and sleep when i'm tired