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Google on Saturday paid tribute to Sandford Fleming - the Scottish-Canadian inventor who invented the worldwide standard time concept to be used across the world, on his 190th birthday.Read more: Apple Cuts CEO Tim Cook's Salary After Fall in iPhone Sales
"Today's Doodle reflects Fleming's legacy on this, the 190th anniversary of his birth," Google said in a statement on Saturday.
It is widely believed that Fleming missing a train in Ireland due to a mistake printed in a timetable ultimately led to his brilliant idea that altered time as we know it.Also read: WhatsApp Users in India Sent Record 14 Billion Messages on New Year's Eve
Fleming was born in Kirkcaldy, Scotland, in 1827. This was a period when regions used solar time to set their own clocks.
Solar time worked well enough until trains came along and the need for standardised time arose.Read more: Vodafone Users Will Get Unlimited Data For 1 Hour; Here is How?
Following his missed train in 1876, Fleming proposed a worldwide standard time at a meeting of the Royal Canadian Institute on February, 8, 1879.
He advocated for dividing the world into 24 time zones beginning at the Greenwich Meridian and spaced at 15 degree intervals.
His proposal gave way to the International Prime Meridian Conference which convened in 1884 and was attended by 25 nations.
It was here that Fleming's system of international standard time was adopted.Read more: Apple Removes New York Times App from iTunes Store in China
Fleming was also known for helping build the Intercontinental Railway, serving as chief engineer of the Canadian Pacific Railway, and designing Canada's first postage stamp.
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