prodigyrick:
So how would I read that timestamp? I installed those libraries. I'm in the Chicago timezone. I live in Farmington, MO.
You already have the timestamp so there is nothing to read.
It sounds like you are wanting the time in "human" local time form.
For that you would use the Time library as it has API functions to do the conversion from epoch time to local time.
However, you are not at the meridian (UTC/GMT- London etc...)
So if you want a local time that is based on you being in US central zone vs London, you have to offset the timestamp appropriately.
Currently the offset is 6 hours or 21,600 seconds.
But the offset will change on Nov 5 due to the daylight savings time change.
You can automatically account for that change into the conversion by using the TimeZone library
to do the conversion for you instead of doing it manually as it can auto detect when to add/subtract the hour based on how you configure the rules.
Read the information about the libraries and see the examples. It isn't difficult.
--- bill