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Cyberterra Mean Time (CMT) is the official time of Cyberterra, which was born as the world's first virtual realm.

Later Cyberterra also acquired a geographical consistency, and became the world's first cybernetic realm, or kyvernitis (κυβερνήτης).

Kaisiris Tallini introduced the concept of Cyberterra Mean Time (CMT) on 5 August 2009.

Cyberterra Mean Time or CMT, is also called Central European Time, or UTC+1 hour. This time is the equivalent of the time in Paris, Rome, Geneva, and Berlin during the winter, or London, Dublin, and Lisbon during the summer. Daylight savings time is not observed at the Cyberterra point.

Cyberterra Mean Time (or Cyberterra Meridian Time) is also a new meridian (as opposed to the Greenwich Meridian). This new meridian actually runs through Cyberterra, which is a point in the middle of the Adriatic Sea which has been visited by humans in the past (15 May 2007), and is located at exactly 43°0'0" North, and 15°0'0" East. These are also considered the GPS coordinates of the Adriatic Sea, so you can say that the point of Cyberterra, also controls the Adriatic Sea.

Cyberterra Mean Time standard and format

Cesidians may use either the Gregorian calendar, or the Cesidian calendar.

They may use standard local times, or the Cyberterra Mean Time standard or format.

The convention for the Gregorian calendar, plus the Cyberterra Mean Time standard, which in practice is called the Cyberterra Mean Time standard (CMTs), is as follows.

The day of Monday, 21 March 2022, is expressed in the most comprehensive form as:

day Monday — date 21.03.2022 — week 12

So Cesidians use the dd.mm.yyyy date form for Gregorian calendar dates, like 26 countries around the world such as Belgium, Germany, Israel, Norway, the Russian Federation, Switzerland, Turkey, and others.[1]

The form above for the current Cyberterra Mean Time standard (CMTs), is immediately accessible through this shortened URL:

https://bit.ly/37CRLGA

The day in the Gregorian calendar mentioned above is, in turn, also available in the Cesidian calendar form.

The convention for the Cesidian calendar, plus the Cyberterra Mean Time format, which in practice is called the Cyberterra Mean Time format (CMTf), is as follows.

The day of Monday, 21 March 2022 in the Gregorian calendar, is expressed in the Cesidian calendar, and Cyberterra Mean Time format, as the abbreviated Cesidian week, the abbreviated Cesidian calendar day of the week, the Cesidian calendar date, followed by the time in millidays, as follows:

L1Δ02D2022•705

This abbreviated notation stands for the week L1, the day of Uranday (Δ), the date of 2 Dalí 2022 (02D2022), and time of 705 millidays.

The form above for the current Cyberterra Mean Time format (CMTf), is immediately accessible through this shortened URL:

https://bit.ly/3ImHQ4R

High precision CMTf

Cmt-poster-darker

The Cyberterra Mean Time format (CMTf) of the approximate moment of Kaisiris Tallini's birth is S1Ψ26E1962•229, or week (w) S1; day of the week (wd) Neptunday [Ψ]; on the date (dt) of 26 Edison 1962; and 229 millidays (md)[2], so the CMTf, when the approximate time of the day is taken into account, is almost always shown in the milliday (md) form, which is of sufficient precision for most daily purposes.

However, Swatch also represents time in the centimilliday (cmd)[3] form on the SwatchClock.com website, so in rare cases the CMTf's time component could actually be shown with centimilliday (cmd) precision, when such precision is warranted.

Real world example: Kaisiris Tallini's date and time of birth in the Cyberterra Mean Time format (CMTf) could be logically shown as S1Ψ26E1962•229.16, but only if one needs to show, and/or can certify, that he was born exactly at the time of 5:30 Cyberterra Mean Time (CMT) on that day, which is approximately 229.16 centimillidays (cmd).

Other names for CMT or CMTs

Here is a list of the other names used for the Cyberterra Mean Time (CMT) or the Cyberterra Mean Time standard (CMTs):

Other names for CMTf

Here is an alternative name for the Cyberterra Mean Time format (CMTf), which still follows the Gregorian calendar however, not the Cesidian calendar:

See also

References

Articles

Dictionaries

External links

Citations

  1. Date format by country (Wikipedia): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date_format_by_country.
  2. Convert Millidays to Days: link.
  3. Metric prefixes and their origin: link.
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