It hardly seems that cut and dry, Ross:Ross wrote:There is no 12 am - there is 12 midnight, and 12 noon (meridian).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/12-hour_cl ... d_midnight
It hardly seems that cut and dry, Ross:Ross wrote:There is no 12 am - there is 12 midnight, and 12 noon (meridian).
It depends on whether you are talking about a one-minute period of time or the instant that minute begins. In my mind, 12am does in fact exist for exactly one minute, and that minute is the minute immediately following midnight.Ross wrote:There is no 12 am - there is 12 midnight, and 12 noon (meridian).

Standard Time, not daylight savings time? so the deadline is really 8 pm by my current clock? I assume you meant Daylight savings time.?Niveous wrote:The due date is at midnight, Eastern Standard Time.
Silly Nur Einers.
Title: "Sleep Tight"
Due Date: April 20 at 12AM EST (also known as April 19 at 9PM PST)
You have a dry sense of humor.Spud wrote:Don't whistle with crumbs in your mouth, BLT.
Oops. I always make that mistake. Yes I mean Daylight Savings Time.Ross wrote:Standard Time, not daylight savings time? so the deadline is really 8 pm by my current clock? I assume you meant Daylight savings time.?Niveous wrote:The due date is at midnight, Eastern Standard Time.
Silly Nur Einers.
Title: "Sleep Tight"
Due Date: April 20 at 12AM EST (also known as April 19 at 9PM PST)
[I'm assuming the deadlines are actually daylight time - and no - I am not worrying, or trying to eb a genuine pain in the butt - I just enjoy a little meaningless technical blabber.]

or 20 April at 4PM EDT NZSTNiveous wrote: Due Date: April 20 at 12AM EDT (also known as April 19 at 9PM PDT)
I think the a.m. controversy is about midnight, not 12. Midnight occurs at the moment the clock strikes 12, it doesn't last for the 12:00 a.m. minute. It doesn't have a duration at all. "12 midnight" is redundant except to differentiate it from that other 12.Spud wrote:It depends on whether you are talking about a one-minute period of time or the instant that minute begins. In my mind, 12am does in fact exist for exactly one minute, and that minute is the minute immediately following midnight.Ross wrote:There is no 12 am - there is 12 midnight, and 12 noon (meridian).
I concede that point - fun conversation.roymond wrote:I think the a.m. controversy is about midnight, not 12. Midnight occurs at the moment the clock strikes 12, it doesn't last for the 12:00 a.m. minute. It doesn't have a duration at all. "12 midnight" is redundant except to differentiate it from that other 12.Spud wrote:It depends on whether you are talking about a one-minute period of time or the instant that minute begins. In my mind, 12am does in fact exist for exactly one minute, and that minute is the minute immediately following midnight.Ross wrote:There is no 12 am - there is 12 midnight, and 12 noon (meridian).
I'm sure this does nothing to clarify anything relevant. You're welcome.
No one else saw this?Spud wrote:so I don't reject any entries that come in during that list minute.
I did, but I didn't want to say anything because I usually send mine in after the list minute.Rone Rivendale wrote:No one else saw this?Spud wrote:so I don't reject any entries that come in during that list minute.

It is a strange way of writing it, but I don't think there is an error there. He is referring to the minute after the deadline passes. This is not the last minute, that was the miinute from 9:58 to 9:59. He is referring to the minute after the last minute. I guess he must have a list of various sumbission rules documeted somewhere, which is why he refers to this minute as the "list" minute.Billy's Little Trip wrote:I did, but I didn't want to say anything because I usually send mine in after the list minute.Rone Rivendale wrote:No one else saw this?Spud wrote:so I don't reject any entries that come in during that list minute.

