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  2. Military Date Time Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date-time_group

    In communications messages, a date-time group (DTG) is a set of characters, usually in a prescribed format, used to express the year, the month, the day of the month, the hour of the day, the minute of the hour, and the time zone, if different from Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).

  3. 16-line message format - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16-line_message_format

    16-line message format, or Basic Message Format, is the standard military radiogram format (in NATO allied nations) for the manner in which a paper message form is transcribed through voice, Morse code, or TTY transmission formats. The overall structure of the message has three parts: HEADING (which can use as many as 10 of the format's 16 ...

  4. IRIG timecode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IRIG_timecode

    SOH is the ASCII "start of header" code, with binary value 0x01. DDD is the ordinal date (day of year), from 1 to 366. HH, MM and SS are the time of the start bit. The code is terminated by a CR+LF pair. At the end of the timecode, the serial line is idle until the start of the next code. There is no idle time between other characters.

  5. Military designation of days and hours - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_designation_of...

    23 June 1945, the day of the dress rehearsal of the first atom bomb test [8] nowadays it is sometimes used informally to mean "Quality Day", or the first day of the calendar quarter. R-Day The unnamed day on which redeployment of major combat, combat support, and combat service support forces begins in an operation.

  6. Date and time notation in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date_and_time_notation_in...

    The military date notation is similar to the date notation in British English but is read cardinally (e.g. "Nineteen July") rather than ordinally (e.g. "The nineteenth of July"). [citation needed] Weeks are generally referred to by the date of some day within that week (e.g., "the week of May 25"), rather than by a week number. Many holidays ...

  7. List of date formats by country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_date_formats_by...

    National standard format is yyyy-mm-dd. [161] dd.mm.yyyy format is used in some places where it is required by EU regulations, for example for best-before dates on food [162] and on driver's licenses. d/m format is used casually, when the year is obvious from the context, and for date ranges, e.g. 28-31/8 for 28–31 August.

  8. Allied Communication Procedures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allied_Communication...

    Allied Communication Procedures is the set of manuals and supplements published by the Combined Communications Electronics Board that prescribe the methods and standards to be used while conducting visual, audible, radiotelegraph, and radiotelephone communications within NATO member nations.

  9. Military time zone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_time_zone

    [10] [better source needed] RFC 733 published in 1977 allowed using military time zones in the Date: field of emails. [11] RFC 1233 in 1989 noted that the signs of the offsets were specified as opposite the common convention (e.g. A=UTC−1 instead of A=UTC+1), [12] and the use of military time zones in emails was deprecated in RFC 2822 in 2001 ...

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