L-P-G
Member
That's a Unix timestamp. How you parse it depends on the language. The only thing that could trip you up when working with it is that this particular Unix timestamp is in seconds, and some date libraries expect milliseconds, so you would need to multiple it by 1,000.
If you pop open your JavaScript Console in your browser's developer tools and type...
Code:new Date(1463347242 * 1000) // The created_at timestamp quoted above multiple by 1,000
...it will return a human-readable date string corresponding to that Unix timestamp.
The timestamp above gave me this: "Mon May 16 2016 06:20:42 GMT+0900 (KST)". Note that this is Korean Standard Time, so you will probably get a half-day earlier or so.
Well you learn something new every day, that worked like a charm thanks for the info.
On a side note had anyone noticed that when you set the temp for either driver or the passenger both zones are set? I take it this was another change by Tesla?