Am I just setting up my system incorrectly?
In a way, yes. You certainly aren't reading the tab that you are looking at.
This is is a quick, dirty, incredibly lazy way to guess language settings that's probably right 99% of the time.
Wrong. The installer programs are using the Windows National Language Support API to obtain the system locale and language that you've configured, to determine what language to prompt you in. The locale information is set with the "Formats" tab in that part of Control Panel.
You're using the "Location" tab. Locations are different to locales and languages, not least because the .NET API for them doesn't really function on Windows prior to Windows NT version 6.1. The locations API is a completely different one, that doesn't even exist on Windows XP prior to Service Pack 3. Installer writers who want to have an installer that works on Windows NT prior to version 6.1 will use the locale API, because that's what exists and what works.
It's also what's right.
There's a difference between a geographic ID and a user interface language, and you're getting them exactly backwards. The location or geographic ID of a computer is where it physically is, and that's what you need to set on the "Location" tab in Control Panel. The UI language is the language that you want to see stuff shown to you in, and that's set in a combination of places elsewhere; including the locale settings that are set by the "Formats" tab in Control Panel.
It does say, at the very top of the "Location" tab, what it is for. Why do you think that setting your computer to obtain the "local information such as news and weather" for the United States, because you've told the system that you are physically located in the United States, is the right thing to do when you are physically located in Germany? Locate your machine where it physically is, and set the language and locale to the language and currency/number/date formatting that you want to see on the user interface.
In short: Nearly 100% of the programs from different vendors aren't operating as you think. It's your thinking that's wrong, not the programs.
So for your example the number of minutes is 548? You can do a simple subtraction to get total hours/minutes, so if you have start time/date in A2 and end time/date in B2 this formula....
=B2-A2
with result cell formatted as [h]:mm will give you 9:08
to get 548 just multiply by 1440 (number of minutes in a day), i.e.
=(B2-A2)*1440
format result cell as general
Best Answer
You can create a shortcut pointing to timedate.cpl