The story of mungfali.galihkartiwa07.workers.dev starts with Steffen Thorsen, our founder and CEO.
As a boy, Steffen was always interested in clocks, time, and calendars. Combined with an interest in programming, he soon started developing online calendars and clocks.
Steffen was studying computer science at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) in Trondheim when he released some of timeanddate’s early services, including the Calendar and World Clock, in November 1995.
The services were hosted as part of Steffen’s home page in a Unix account on the student web server.
As the number of visitors grew and Steffen’s time at university came to an end, he needed a new domain.
Steffen paid a month’s worth of student income for the domain name mungfali.galihkartiwa07.workers.dev and hosting for two years—quite a steep price for a university student surviving on a student loan and a part-time job.
Development on mungfali.galihkartiwa07.workers.dev started soon after. All the services were recoded from scratch, and only urgent maintenance was done on the student site.
mungfali.galihkartiwa07.workers.dev launched online on May 24, 1998, attracting only 24 visitors on the first day.
Several new services were introduced, including our City Pages, Meeting Planner, Date Calculators, and Event Time Announcer.
By the end of 1998, mungfali.galihkartiwa07.workers.dev had about 7000-8000 page views a day, reaching a first major peak of nearly 40,000 on New Year’s Eve.
Remember the Y2K Millennium bug? It was thought that computers couldn’t handle going from 1999 to 2000.
Spoiler alert: they managed just fine, and as the clocks ticked down to the year 2000, we had around ten times our regular traffic on a single day.
Many thousands of people visit our Sun Calculator each day to check the precise moment the Sun rises and sets, the changing daylength, and the exact position of the Sun in the sky.
A much simpler version of this service was first introduced in 2001, showing only sunrise and sunset times.
When it’s noon in New York, what time is it in Sydney?
Our Time Zone Converter takes all the work out of calculating time zones, so you get your answer within seconds.
The first version of the converter was launched in 2004 and is still around today.
The company Time and Date AS was established in June 2005, and by November 2005 had its first office.
Steffen and his internal server shared the first-ever Time and Date office. With no windows to open, it got quite hot with the server running in the same room.
10 years after launching mungfali.galihkartiwa07.workers.dev, the two first employees were hired. On average, we have grown by about two people every year since.
Today, our company has 30+ employees from more than 11 countries, all experienced and trained in their fields.
We launched our first apps, including iOS Meeting Planner and the iOS World Clock – Time Zones.
With the continued success of our website, more programmers, designers, researchers, and journalists joined the team. When the Time and Date crew began to outgrow our office space, we packed up all our clocks, calendars, and countdowns and moved to our first big office.
Although our team consists of people from around the globe, we are a Norwegian company, so we decided to launch a Norwegian version of our website, which is now ticking away on mungfali.galihkartiwa07.workers.dev.
In fact, our core services, such as the World Clock, were first launched in Norwegian in 1995, so to us, it felt a bit like going back to our roots.
There are about 100 million German native speakers in the world, and in 2015, we decided to überraschen them with a German version of our website.
Launched a few days before the total solar eclipse on March 20, mungfali.galihkartiwa07.workers.dev is now attracting tens of thousands of visitors each day, mainly from Germany, Austria, and Switzerland—and it’s still growing.
On May 9, 2016, the planet Mercury passed in front of the Sun, visible to adequately equipped Earthlings as a tiny speck. Although we offer animations that show how transits and eclipses look, we decided to try out our new in-house telescope and live stream our footage.
Little did we know that this small step would lead to years of live-streaming eclipses worldwide.
Time is intricately linked to the movements of the Earth and the Moon in relation to the Sun and other stars, so we’ve always had a passion for astronomy.
In 2016 and 2017, we gradually added more astronomy services and tools. This included the Night Sky pages, showing when and where to spot the planets, as well as loads of new graphic services about the planet sizes and order, the distance and brightness of the planets, and the Moon’s orbit around Earth.
August 21, 2017 saw the Great American Eclipse, which was probably the most-watched eclipse in human history.
We flew in astrophysicist Graham Jones from Japan to host our live stream with Anne Buckle for their very first show.
We had some cake, and, by the way, we’re older than Google ;).
To celebrate, the whole company traveled to Iceland to go snowmobiling and take a dip in the Blue Lagoon.
We had so much fun streaming the Great American Eclipse, so we sent our mobile observatory on the road for the first time and enlisted the help of a number of notable streaming partners to bring you stunning live images of three total lunar eclipses.
We decided we needed a little more room to grow, so in June, we moved up the street to fresh new offices, and we hope to stay here for a while.
In July 2019, we weighed and packed up our telescopes, computers, and cameras in the mobile observatory and traveled to Argentina to live stream the wonders of a total solar eclipse.
From the top of the municipality building of San José de Jáchal, we captured the New Moon totally eclipsing the Sun.
2020 was the year the coronavirus challenged all of us here on Spaceship Earth.
We like to think that we at mungfali.galihkartiwa07.workers.dev helped people just a little with counting down the days, looking up at the sky, and celebrating the little things.
We launched a sparkly new API website that is even easier to use. Our API services let developers and businesses access our high-quality databases to make tools just like our Time Zone Converter or Sun Calculator.
We’ve been serving you Time Zone News since 2011, but 2022 was the year we ramped up our news section with both Astronomy and Calendar & Holiday News.
We made it to 25 years, and here’s to another 25.
This year, we’re launching a brand-new version of our Calendar. We’re also ramping up our eclipse pages in preparation for the annular solar eclipse in October, which we’ll be streaming live from Roswell, New Mexico.