I dont know what time that is in my time so I'll have to find out before I make any decisions.
I can't speak for Schism on this one, but since he lives in the GMT-5 timezone (US Eastern Standard), I imagine that's the timezone he was referring to.
To Schism (and everyone else, for that matter): A bit of a tip for internet communications (including this project), never assume that people know what timezone you're in, or which timezone you're referring to, when specifying time. Giving your GMT offset is the best bet (this server, in Florida, is GMT-5, or GMT-4 during DST), especially for non-US users, but if you don't know it, at least give the timezone name (US Eastern Standard/US Eastern Daylight) or abbreviation (EST, EDT, etc) to give people some frame of reference.
This is a lesson I've learned after many years of talking to a LOT of people online from all over the globe, and is especially important to non-US residents who might not have a clue what timezone specific US states are in. It's also a problem for the all-numeric shortened date formats commonly used in the US. Personally, I've remedied this by writing date and time in the most universal, unconfusable format possible (without making it really long). For example, I'd write a date and time as: Nov 2, 2009, 18:35 (GMT-5). Date format that can't be misinterpreted, time in 24h format (some countries don't use am/pm, including some European countries), with a universally-recognized timezone (nearly everyone knows what GMT is and what their own offset is).