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I guess I just don't find the relative timestamp to be a more intuitive way of seeing that. If I see today's date and a time this morning, I don't need to "translate" that into an exact number of hours because "12 hours ago" isn't more meaningful to me than "this morning", an "2 minutes ago" is likely going to be wrong quickly (or require a technical measure to keep accurate, and given that the relative timestamp already arguably is more work to implement, that's now two extra things added to try to solve a problem that I don't really understand to exist in the first place).

Having thought through a bunch of different orders of magnitude of time (time in the past measured in seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, and years), I'm confident that I'd personally find the actual date and time to be more intuitive in every single one of them. What I'm not confident in is whether that would be the case for everyone else or not. I don't think there would be anything wrong with someone feeling differently than me, and if it turns out I'm in the minority, I wouldn't have any trouble accepting it, but it feels so fundamentally disconnected with the way I think about things that I have trouble conceiving of it other than as a hypothetical.



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