top | item 41737435 (no title) beojan | 1 year ago At least for the identification sticker / stripe on cars we've moved from GB to UK. Maybe we'll just move to uk as the ISO 2 letter code. discuss order hn newest alexchamberlain|1 year ago https://web.archive.org/web/20120616044022/http://www.iso.or...Apparently "United" and "Kingdom" aren't valid for ISO, so they went with ignoring part of the name completely. xp84|1 year ago That’s interesting. It kind of makes sense. I guess the US makes this rule kind of funny too. I guess we’re lucky we didn’t get .am for “America.” TRiG_Ireland|1 year ago IVR codes are not ISO 3166-1 codes. The ISO codes are all two letters; the IVR codes range from one to three letters.
alexchamberlain|1 year ago https://web.archive.org/web/20120616044022/http://www.iso.or...Apparently "United" and "Kingdom" aren't valid for ISO, so they went with ignoring part of the name completely. xp84|1 year ago That’s interesting. It kind of makes sense. I guess the US makes this rule kind of funny too. I guess we’re lucky we didn’t get .am for “America.”
xp84|1 year ago That’s interesting. It kind of makes sense. I guess the US makes this rule kind of funny too. I guess we’re lucky we didn’t get .am for “America.”
TRiG_Ireland|1 year ago IVR codes are not ISO 3166-1 codes. The ISO codes are all two letters; the IVR codes range from one to three letters.
alexchamberlain|1 year ago
Apparently "United" and "Kingdom" aren't valid for ISO, so they went with ignoring part of the name completely.
xp84|1 year ago
TRiG_Ireland|1 year ago