Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
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- Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
30-10-2011 7:07 PM
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In your Broadband speed tables for various products, you mention time slots like 11pm-12am and 12am-6pm.
When I read this I guess that 12am means midnight - but some people use this same term to mean mid-day.
See http://www.npl.co.uk/science-technology/time-frequency/time/faqs/is-midnight-12-a.m.-or-12-p.m.-(faq...
If it _did_ mean mid day, that would make most of your products unsuitable for me.
So, can you confirm that when you say 12am it means midnight?
How about a helpful note on the Broadband speeds tables?
Re: Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
30-10-2011 7:15 PM
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This can be seen by the fact that almost all products are shown as line speed over night (the exception being VPN and Gaming on Value and midnight to 1.00am on Fibre)
http://www.plus.net/support/broadband/speed_guide/download_speeds.shtml
Re: Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
30-10-2011 7:26 PM
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I would say "You certainly took your time in replying" - but I'm no good at them there smiley icon thingies and you might think I was serious.
I now have to decide between "Value" & "Extra"...
SamP
Re: Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
31-10-2011 7:43 PM
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Re: Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
01-11-2011 10:19 AM
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That's how I always remember it
Re: Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
01-11-2011 10:24 AM
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Quote There is no confusion when using the words 12 noon (or mid-day) and 12 midnight, although the use of 12 midnight can raise the question of 'which day?'. To avoid confusion in, for example, an insurance certificate, it is always better to use the 24-hour clock, when 12:00 is 12 noon and, for example, 24:00 Sunday or 00:00 Monday both mean 12 midnight Sunday/Monday. It is common in transport timetables to use 23:59 Sunday or 00:01 Monday (in this example), or 11:59 p.m. or 12:01 a.m., to further reduce confusion.
There are no standards established for the meaning of 12 a.m. and 12 p.m. It is often said that 12 a.m. Monday is midnight on Monday morning and 12 p.m. is mid-day. This puts all the times beginning with 12 and ending with a.m. in the same one-hour block, similarly with those ending with p.m. It can also be argued that by the time you have seen a clock showing 12:00 at mid-day it is already post meridiem, and similarly at midnight it is already ante meridiem. Times in the first hour of the day are sometimes given as, for example, 00:47 a.m., with 00:00 a.m. corresponding to midnight, but with a time twelve hours later given as 12:47 p.m.
Another convention sometimes used is that, since 12 noon is by definition neither ante meridiem (before noon) nor post meridiem (after noon), then 12 a.m. refers to midnight at the start of the specified day (00:00) and 12 p.m. to midnight at the end of that day (24:00). Given this ambiguity, the terms 12 a.m. and 12 p.m. should be avoided.
Re: Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
01-11-2011 10:45 AM
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To argue with someone who has renounced the use of reason is like administering medicine to the dead - Thomas Paine
Re: Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
01-11-2011 10:52 AM
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Re: Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
01-11-2011 11:37 AM
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That is a coherent system otherwise use the 24.00 clock
I think PN and others have lost their way trying to adapt a system to another purpose
But that doesn't answer the question or help the OP in any way
To be is to do - Kant
do be do be do - Sinatra
Re: Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
01-11-2011 11:39 AM
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Re: Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
01-11-2011 3:28 PM
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Re: Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
01-11-2011 5:42 PM
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Edit: It's 65 not 55 anyway
jelv (a.k.a Spoon Whittler) Why I have left Plusnet (warning: long post!) Broadband: Andrews & Arnold Home::1 (FTTC 80/20) Line rental: Pulse 8 Home Line Rental (£14.40/month) Mobile: iD mobile (£4/month) |
Re: Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"
02-11-2011 11:55 PM
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Quote from: Jameseh 12am is midnight. The moment the clock hits 12am, it is then morning.
That's how I always remember it
No,it's neither at Midnight.It becomes morning after midnight not at it.
.........................proud" say Pnet.
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- Silly Question perhaps, but what _is_ "12am"