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Would you be open to the idea of adding a new {{{tz-full-name}}} parameter to {}, that would be the full name of the time zone (e.g. "British Summer Time"), alongside the default parameter 1 for the timezone abbreviation – if {{{tz-full-name}}} is present, then the module would use this to select which timezone to use, but would still use ...
Asana, Inc. (/ ə ˈ s ɑː n ə / or / ˈ ɑː s ə n ə /) is an American software company based in San Francisco whose flagship Asana service is a web and mobile "work management" [3] platform designed to help teams organize, track, and manage their work. [4] Asana, Inc. was founded in 2008 by Dustin Moskovitz and Justin Rosenstein. [5]
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The main purpose of this page is to list the current standard time offsets of different countries, territories and regions. Information on daylight saving time or historical changes in offsets can be found in the individual offset articles (e.g. UTC+01:00) or the country-specific time articles (e.g. Time in Russia).
The tz database partitions the world into regions where local clocks all show the same time. This map was made by combining version 2023d with OpenStreetMap data, using open source software. [1] This is a list of time zones from release 2025a of the tz database. [2]
Such designations can be ambiguous; for example, "CST" can mean China Standard Time (UTC+08:00), Cuba Standard Time (UTC−05:00), and (North American) Central Standard Time (UTC−06:00), and it is also a widely used variant of ACST (Australian Central Standard Time, UTC+9:30). Such designations predate both ISO 8601 and the internet era; in ...
In 1968 [23] there was a three-year experiment called British Standard Time, when the UK and Ireland experimentally employed British Summer Time (GMT+1) all year round; clocks were put forward in March 1968 and not put back until October 1971. [24] Central European Time is sometimes referred to as continental time in the UK.
The Indian Standard Time was adopted on 1 January 1906 during the British era with the phasing out of its precursor Madras Time (Railway Time), [2] and after Independence in 1947, the Union government established IST as the official time for the whole country, although Kolkata and Mumbai retained their own local time (known as Calcutta Time and Bombay Time) until 1948 and 1955, respectively. [3]