![]() ![]() It's worth noting that Firefox formats time as the number of microseconds since Januand the name for the format is PRTimeĪll of these are in an ISO 8601 EPOCH format. Januis considered to be the birth of UNIX. Originally it was Janubut was later rounded to January 1, 1970. Perhaps they just rounded up to the next century.ĭownloads.start_time is the number of seconds since JanuUTC Prior to 1583 time was based on the proleptic Gregorian calendar which has 366 days per year. And if you speculate further according to ISO8601 which is the format in which it is in, ISO8601 works as far back as the year 1581. In other words, it was chosen to make the math come out nicely. Click a resource to view its HTTP headers in the section below the table. Expand the Cache Storage section to view available caches. ![]() I think the popular answer is because the Gregorian calendar operates on a 400-year cycle, and 1601 is the first year of the cycle that was active at the time Windows NT was being designed. Click the Application tab to open the Application panel. Visits.visit_time is in microseconds since JanuUTC which is similar but not to be mistaken for Windows filetime which is the number of 100 nanoseconds since JanuUTC. ![]()
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