It depends, in part, on where you live. In the United States, the eastern time zone is way too large. Maine should probably go into the Atlantic time zone, and some of the western states go into the Central.
China laughs at thisMost people have no idea about
15 degree time zones (24 of them
times 15 is 360 degrees around the Earth. ;(that’s not even mentioning Romeo using Quebec time or for you on West Coast, Uniform using Tango time)
If you don’t understand it, I’m not going to teach it here.
Standard time today, tomorrow, forever.
I remember that from the Nixon era. Living in deep South Texas I wasn't severely impacted.I remember the spots and discussion on nightly national news showing kids going to school in the dark.I keep late hours for many years, so I get up later. I've always wished for year-round DST. I do recall the one (or two?) year period, early 1970's, with year-round DST. That might have been a Nixon executive order(?) That was all to do with the first oil embargo and a belief that it would conserve energy. The main complaint was about kids at bus stops in the dark AM. The solution seemed simple; start and finish school later. That may have had the added benefit of eliminating some of the "latch key kid" unsupervised time, late day.
Actually, anymore, I would welcome either one permanently.
Now you are just creating work for the software industry!Adjust time 30 minutes. Leave it alone permanently. Some like it. Others don't but they are only 30 minutes unhappy not 1 hour unhappy. Machts nichts.
That will never happen and it shouldn't ever be an option on the table. All time zones world-wide are predicated on an hourly deviation from UTC, so it must stay on the hour.Adjust time 30 minutes. Leave it alone permanently. Some like it. Others don't but they are only 30 minutes unhappy not 1 hour unhappy. Machts nichts.
That will never happen and it shouldn't ever be an option on the table. All time zones world-wide are predicated on an hourly deviation from UTC, so it must stay on the hour.
Have you tried starting a 10 minute adjustment to the routine about a week out, so that when the clock changes it has already become the "new" normal?
Exactly. No amount of tinkering with the clock will change that. The difference in daylight between June 21 and December 21 is significant and it can't be "fixed" with the clock, at least not in a way that satisfies everyone. Don't forget the differences between the east and west ends of each time zone; that is another variable to consider. The sun comes up late and sets early in December, no matter how we set the clocks.The winter time is depressing, it is dark when I leave for work and its dark when I leave.
Something I don't think anyone has mentioned and I just noticed this morning is how DST royally mucks up morning commuters. Especially for those who commute W-E/E-W AM/PM. Just prior to the implementation of DST the sun has risen high enough to not significantly interfere with with vision of commuters rolling in from the west side of the city. However, once we transition to DST the sun is back into the eyes of drivers during the busiest time of their commutes making traffic miserable for everyone.
It's simple...everyone needs to live East of their workplace like I doSomething I don't think anyone has mentioned and I just noticed this morning is how DST royally mucks up morning commuters. Especially for those who commute W-E/E-W AM/PM. Just prior to the implementation of DST the sun has risen high enough to not significantly interfere with with vision of commuters rolling in from the west side of the city. However, once we transition to DST the sun is back into the eyes of drivers during the busiest time of their commutes making traffic miserable for everyone.
I swore that if I ever moved I would live east of my office. LOL.It's simple...everyone needs to live East of their workplace like I do![]()