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  1. stackoverflow.com

    tl;dr. Standard ISO 8601 format is used by your input string.. Instant.parse ( "2011-08-12T20:17:46.384Z" ) ISO 8601. This format is defined by the sensible practical standard, ISO 8601. The T separates the date portion from the time-of-day portion. The Z on the end means UTC (that is, an offset-from-UTC of zero hours-minutes-seconds). The Z is pronounced "Zulu".
  2. calculator.net

    For example, 1 hour, or 60 minutes, can be evenly divided into 30, 20, 15, 12, 10, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, and 1 minute, illustrating some of the reasoning behind the sexagesimal system's use in measuring time. ... calendar was inaccurate and allowed the astronomical equinoxes and solstices to advance against it by approximately 11 minutes per year. The ...
  3. weatherspark.com

    This report shows the past weather for Columbus, providing a weather history for October 2020. It features all historical weather data series we have available, including the Columbus temperature history for October 2020. You can drill down from year to month and even day level reports by clicking on the graphs.
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  1. The T is just a literal to separate the date from the time, and the Z means "zero hour offset" also known as "Zulu time" (UTC). If your strings always have a "Z" you can use:

    SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat(
        "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSS'Z'", Locale.US);
    format.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("UTC"));

    Or using Joda Time, you can use ISODateTimeFormat.dateTime().

    --Jon Skeet

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