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Daylight Saving Change Saved No Power

Brett writes "Results from energy companies are coming in, and the word is that moving Daylight Saving Time forward three weeks had no measurable impact on power consumption. The attempt by the US Congress to make it look like they were doing something about the energy crisis has been exposed as the waste it is. But the new DST is probably here to stay — letting the bill expire would mean re-patching a lot of systems again next year. So much for saving energy."

766 comments

  1. But...but.. by cayenne8 · · Score: 4, Funny

    But, the DST change was one of the ONLY things they could agree on!!!!

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    1. Re:But...but.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And now you can see why: it was designed to make them look good, and nothing else. Plus everyone just loves the "extra hour of sunlight"!!11one.

    2. Re:But...but.. by Taelron · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The whole thing has been a joke and a colossal waste of money and resources... Personally I'd rather see Daylight savings time be tossed out entirely... Though Microsoft is loving it.

      http://support.microsoft.com/gp/lifean22

      If you still had a Windows 2000 server on your network you had to either buy new software and give microsoft your money or pay $4000 to buy the DST hotfixes. Ironically leading up to change and for atleast one week afterwords you had to pay the $4000 fee to receive the hot fix. Now 3 weeks later they offer you a free manual update utility or the option to buy the $4000 hotfix. *The free manual utility was NOT available when everyone was rushing to update their older servers* Links to the old tech bulletin that only offered the pay for hotfix is no longer valid.

      So out of curriosity, how much money did Microsoft make off the daylight savings change?

    3. Re:But...but.. by Dieppe · · Score: 1

      Yes.. but how could you be against puppies and kittens????

    4. Re:But...but.. by ThatsNotFunny · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm against puppies and kittens when they're attacking the children. Won't somebody please think of the children?

      --
      "Was it a millionaire who said 'Imagine No Posessions?'" -- Elvis Costello
    5. Re:But...but.. by Xanius · · Score: 1

      Well the whole thing was stupid in the first place. Power consumption has nothing to do with if it's dark or not. People leave lights on during the day,T.Vs on when nobody is watching(day or night) and most importantly, computers are left on 24/7 in businesses and at home. Anyone who thought this would actually lower power usage is a complete dumb shit.

    6. Re:But...but.. by Misch · · Score: 2, Funny

      Won't somebody please think of the children?

      Where's Mark Foley when you need him?

      --

      --You will rephrase your request for me to go to hell. Goto statements are not acceptable programming constructs
    7. Re:But...but.. by Scarletdown · · Score: 1

      If you still had a Windows 2000 server on your network you had to either buy new software and give microsoft your money or pay $4000 to buy the DST hotfixes.


      Or alternatively, Win 2K users could download and run this Free Patch.

      (Also works with XP.)

      --
      This space unintentionally left blank.
    8. Re:But...but.. by Taelron · · Score: 1

      Alas, but that doesnt help users with Exchange... Part of the $4000 hotfix kit you buy includes the DST updates for Exchange 2000 (which still are not freely available)

      And sadly, yes, I know several companys still sitting on Exchange 2000. It works for them and they dont see why they should pay the Microsoft tax three times over (Exchange 2003, Windows 2003R2 64bit and Exchange 2007). Luckily most are using them soley as spam filters or frontends for webmail access. Though a few poor souls are still using it as their principle mail server. Some people refuse to spend money on IT until they absolutely have to...

    9. Re:But...but.. by tbone1 · · Score: 1
      Won't somebody please think of the children?

      Right-ho ....... Mmmm, delicious!

      --

      The Independent: Reverend Spooner Arrested in Friar Tuck Incident - ISIHAC, Historical Headlines
    10. Re:But...but.. by indifferent+children · · Score: 1
      People leave lights on during the day,T.Vs on when nobody is watching(day or night)

      Thanks. The rest of the world didn't have a low enough opinion of Americans, so you had to give them one more reason to think that we are selfish idiots. Of course, what you said was true, but I think that we've already inspired enough "anti-Americanism" for this year.

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    11. Re:But...but.. by Avatar8 · · Score: 1
      Not true.

      I'm quite certain they ALL agree on giving themselves a pay raise EVERY year.

    12. Re:But...but.. by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      See also: even-odd license plate days at gas stations, which actually increases the line size instead of decreasing it

      Mathematicians have actually testified against this to various state legislatures, who then vote for it anyway because you, the voter, like to see them doing something, even if it's 180 degrees the wrong thing.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    13. Re:But...but.. by Quikah · · Score: 1

      Are you talking about the tzedit utility? That has been available for a while. I used it to update a couple of Windows 2000 servers I had back in January. KB 914387 has been around for a while.

      --
      Q.
    14. Re:But...but.. by BakaHoushi · · Score: 1

      Congress makes needless changes that ultimately annoy people but makes no positive change on the world around them in order to make themselves look like busy people when they're not out having affairs with children and expanding their power base.

      How, exactly, is this newsworthy? Same old, same old. Move along, nothing to see here...

    15. Re:But...but.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, they don't have to agree. Unless they agree specifically to NOT get a pay raise, they get a pay raise automatically every year.

      I'm sure they all have a drink to the genius who thought that one up when they get their annual raise.

  2. Quit'cher Bitchin' by duerra · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Look, I understand people that want to take a stab at the administration - Bush's administration has done far more harm than good, but come on - bashing like this summary is just not necessary. This was a widely supported idea beyond just the US - a number of countries followed suit in the idea. At the very least, it didn't HURT anything - so why bitch about it so much? Oh well, you had to patch your systems. It's over and done with. No need to try and make this into a "prime opportunity" to bash the administration for at least trying. There's plenty of other things to gripe about when it comes to this administration - learn to pick your fights, otherwise you just end up looking like a giant douche.... or a turd sandwich.

    1. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by qwijibo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You must work for a small company that takes part in reality if you already did the patching. There was no compelling business justification for patching the systems, so failing to get rid of the change means it remains on the eternal todo list, right next to backups. The joys of administering systems for a large bank.

    2. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Hades- · · Score: 1

      Didn't hurt anyone, huh? I wanted to hurt myself very badly trying to figure out why TZMOVE.EXE and TZMOVE.MSI didn't agree with any of my exchange servers, all while fighting off the EVP's and CEO's wondering why their meetings are out of whack. So yeah, it hurt a lot.

    3. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by MeanderingMind · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually, it's arguable it did hurt a number of things.

      1) A significant amount of manpower had to be expended in order to assure that the computer systems across the world supporting this change were ready for it.

      2) A number of home and business computer systems alike failed to change, sometimes resulting in mischeduled meetings and moderate confusion.

      3) Congress wasted time on this bill that could have been spent getting something important done, such as finally hammering out a definate government policy on Stem Cell research, abortions, or actually making a true impact on the energy issue we face.

      Time and money were wasted, for an energy revenue of nil. It may not have increased energy costs, but costs in general were incurred.

      --
      Thunderclone: ONE MAN ENTERS! TWO MEN LEAVE! ONE MAN ENTERS! TWO MEN LEAVE!
    4. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Giolon · · Score: 5, Funny

      It didn't hurt anything? My "automatic" clock that I bought a few years ago is now worthless. It's supposed to automatically change based on the old DST schedule. Now, I have to manually turn it ahead myself, then a few weeks later, remember to manually turn it back because it automatically went forward on the old scehdule. Ditto for the fall. It's obnoxious. The government owes me a new automatic clock.

    5. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by gr8_phk · · Score: 1
      Oh yea, no problem. My coworkers in England have not changed, so for 3 weeks they are 4 hours different instead of 5. I say we just move it 3 months more (or whatever the amount is) so we never have to change our clocks.

      On another note, just because power consumption hasn't changed doesn't mean it had no effect. The goal was to reduce power consumed by large corporations. Somehow I doubt if more people coming to work in the dark had that effect either.... OTOH, people driving to work in the dark reduces gas mileage which equals more profit for oil companies - would it be enough of a change for them to measure?

    6. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I beg to differ. The financial industry is reported to have spent over $2.2 billion dollars patching and hardening computer systems to deal with the abnormal DST change. Goodness knows how much has been spent in other industries.

    7. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Possibility · · Score: 1

      it didn't HURT anything
      But it DID hurt, or more accurately COST money to develop the patches, distribute the patches, apply the patches, fix the systems that did not get patched and fix data affected by un-patched systems. Congress, or more accurately, the previous Congress could not actually do ANYTHING to reduce energy consumption, (being politically unfeasible for Republicans then,) so they chose this old chestnut to portray themselves as having accomplished something. No, wasted money they did. Lots.
    8. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fortunately I have an inexhaustible supply of administration bashing so long as they continue to do stupid things. Wide support just means that the administration was able to convince other boneheads that this boneheaded idea was a good idea. Your implication that making fun of the Bushites in this case is a waste of perfectly good ridicule falls flat in the face of the fact that ridicule is free, easy to come up with in their case, and more fun that smiling and nodding at the crazy people.

    9. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't hurt anything? What about all the $$ companies had to spend to recode for the new DST, patch and test systems, problems related to old software and devices that couldn't be patched, etc. I believe the estimates for this cost to businesses was estimated to be in the billions of dollars, not to mention all the wasted time immplementing said patches.

      I don't consider all that waste of time and money to be "no harm done".

      Whether this was driven by the Bush administration, non-US countries, or whatever, I think anyone with an ounce of sense knew this was going to be one huge waste.

    10. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      #1- the summary didn't mention Bush's Administration, only the US Congress.

      #2- if you weren't personally affected by having to patch Windows systems in a specific order, then you must be lucky enough not to have an administration that insists on using Microsoft from the Exchange Servers all the way down to cell phones (with Outlook along the way) for meeting scheduling.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    11. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by MindStalker · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Same here, remembered about it on the new DST change. But was confused when it suddenly jumped an hour forward this Sunday. An no way to patch the sucker. Strange thing is its "Automatic Time Setting" seems to be some sorta trick. Pull it from the wall, replug, and it "automatically" sets it to the wrong time..

    12. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Kimos · · Score: 1

      But don't worry. It was all worth it since they got to sneak in an hour of sunny evening shopping for three weeks. Who cares about saving energy or lost corporate dollars when you can squeeze out some more of that expendable income from the average suburb resident. Who wants to go shopping in the dark anyway? It's dangerous out there...

    13. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by div_2n · · Score: 1

      At the very least, it didn't HURT anything - so why bitch about it so much?

      I guess some of us value our time differently than others. Staying late and patching systems because some politician had a stupid idea isn't a way I value spending my time.

      We should pick one time and stick with it. Period. Anything else is a worthless exercise in futility that does little besides mess with people's sleep schedules.

    14. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by adamjaskie · · Score: 1

      I don't really like "spring forward". As far as I am concerned, we should just give up on it, and stick with "fall back". Hell, we could "fall back" a few times a year for all I care.

      --
      /usr/games/fortune
    15. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by edwardpickman · · Score: 2, Informative

      The reason is it's yet more proof it's a do nothing Congress. Even when they do something it has no positive effect. Business sees energy reform cutting into their short term bottom line and that's all most care about so don't expect Congress to get off their asses anytime soon. Alot of the changes will save money over time but it'll cut into their short term profits so they are seen as a bad thing. Any time you do anything some one isn't going to like it so Congress has taken the stance of simply doing nothing. They are big on committes and making statements but they rarely take proactive action on anything. We need leadership not smoke and mirrors. They would have accomplished far more by requiring a 5% or 10% increase in gas mileage. The car companies could easily meet those goals and it would save a huge amount of oil. Even that is seen as draconian in the Bush administration.

    16. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Dr.+Zowie · · Score: 1

      No need to try and make this into a "prime opportunity" to bash the administration for at least trying.


      The thing is, this was done before by the Carter administration, and it didn't work then either. Stupidity is doing the same thing and thinking something different will happen.

      The current administration doesn't need a lot of help finding reasons to be bashed. This one is pretty third-rate, compared to the meltdown that is currently happening after a mere 107 days of true congressional oversight. But it's a good example of the administration's modus operandi. Either the stated reasons for the policy were lies, or the administration are pretty damned incompetent. Take your pick, just don't admit to having voted for them.

    17. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would you buy such a clock? Is it really too much effort for you to set your clock two times a year? I know I'm lazy, but this is ridiculous.

    18. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Earl+The+Squirrel · · Score: 1

      Not everything COULD be patched....I've got a DVD/VCR player that the brain surgeons who designed it didn't THINK that Congress could or would ever change the dates. So for the rest of it's "useful" functional life, I've got to deal with its time twice a year. I imagine that other such devices exist...so, I don't know about you, but it cost me $$...(cause my wife is going to make me replace the thing because of the panic it caused when she thought the time was an hour different....)

    19. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Z0mb1eman · · Score: 3, Informative

      This was a widely supported idea beyond just the US - a number of countries followed suit in the idea

      A number of countries followed suit out of necessity to stay synchronized with U.S. businesses, rather than because of any particular support for the idea.

      --
      ClutterMe.com - easiest site creation on the Net. Just click and type.
    20. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by debest · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This was a widely supported idea beyond just the US - a number of countries followed suit in the idea.

      I've checked Wikipedia, and I didn't see much of any countries that have followed the USA on this initiative other than Canada. Even Mexico didn't follow (assuming the ariticle is accurate).

      I live in Canada, and I can tell you that we followed out of economic necessity, and no other reason. Our economy is so tied to America (in terms of cross-border business) that we realistically had no choice. But we certainly don't like it, especially those further north: with the pushing of the clock so much earlier this year, people were heading to work and kids were walking to school in pitch-black darkness again.

      And, of course, we had the same PITA tech issues with the time change the Americans had. For Canadians in general, the negatives of this change outweighed the positive by a long shot.
      --
      Look at the tomato! Isn't it sad? He can't dance! Poor tomato!
    21. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have an automatic alarm clock that does not support the time change. I can't patch that, I have to get a new one. I was late to work that day because no alarm clock whether it be cell phone or manual alarm could cope with the automatic change. I would have been better off setting a timer. Not only that, my employer (a fortune 500 company) is still coping with mischeduled meetings over a month later. You can't tell me it did no harm.

    22. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by basscomm · · Score: 1

      Do they not have power failures where you come from? Being late for work because the power went off and came back on in the middle of the night, blowing away your alarm clock's settings is one reason you might want one of these clocks.

      --
      http://crummysocks.com
    23. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      3) Congress wasted time on this bill that could have been spent getting something important done, such as finally hammering out a definate government policy on Stem Cell research, abortions, or actually making a true impact on the energy issue we face.
      I'd say anything congress wastes time on instead of tackling important things is a good thing. They have a terrible track record in the "important stuff" arena. Gridlock is Great!

      Also, they wouldn't actually tackle any of the issues you've mentioned. Instead they'd enact some sweeping legislation that affects everyone, but fails to actually resolve anything at all. That way, at the next election, they can blame the other guys for not getting enough done, while at the same time telling people from all sides of the issue that they're on their side.
      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    24. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, except what about all the small businesses that use Exchange 2000. As far as I know unless you have a ridiculously expensive extended support contract with MS and and extra 4 grand hand to them, you have a an exchange server that cannot deal with the new dates.

      sorry but I had to bitch.

    25. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      The most ludicrous part of your post is "...to bash the administration for at least trying".

      1. Some of us don't believe that they are trying (to do good).
      2. We don't bash them for trying; we criticize them for failing.
      3. Being President is different than being a grade schooler who gets commended for trying hard.

      I don't think anyone will be camping on the Washington Mall in protest, but it's our duty to hold the government accountable for their actions.

    26. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by raju1kabir · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So yeah, it hurt a lot.

      Some tiny number of people had to wrestle with Windows inanity (and that's a self-selected group of people who voluntarily took jobs that require wrestling with Windows inanity).

      Meanwhile, a huge number of people get a quality-of-life boost from the extra daylight in the evening, which makes it more pleasant to walk home from work, to run late-afternoon errands, or just to enjoy some time outdoors on nice spring and autumn days.

      In an ideal world they'd keep pushing it back until the start and end finally met, and then abolish it entirely, leaving the clocks on summer time all year round. But until that time, at least things are a bit better. And next time they change it, you Windows-wrestlers will know what to do.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    27. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congress wasted time?

      Like your freaking non binding resolutions?

      Piss off partisan boi.

    28. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by raehl · · Score: 3, Funny

      Congress wasted time on this bill that could have been spent getting something important done, such as finally hammering out a definate government policy on Stem Cell research, abortions

      Yeah, because Congress totally would have accomplished something on THOSE deadlock issues....

    29. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by 2short · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Congress wasted time on this bill that could have been spent getting something important done"

      Dude, this is the previous (Republican controlled) Congress we're talking about. They spent the vast majority of their time on vacation. They convened for fewer days than any Congress in a hundred years. I suppose they could have used the time spent debating this bill to do something meaningful, but they weren't exactly hurting for time.

    30. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by JhohannaVH · · Score: 1

      Because it WASN'T THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION YA MORONS! Congress made this law all by their little lonesomes. You know, that whole dividing line between the Legislative and Executive branches. But then, it shows what MORONS the voting public continues to re-elect. Ya know... like that idiot William Jefferson that had 90k in cash in his freezer. :P And HE got re-elected!

      --
      Sorry man... the Internet pooped on me.
    31. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by msblack · · Score: 1

      Bitchin' about nothing you say? This genius Congressman Markey from Massachusetts upset a lot of people who suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder with no appreciable societal benefit. Even the government's own DST website says that extending DST in the fall past mid-October results in no energy savings. So we're to accept the honorable Congressman's claim that "everybody loves a little more sunshine" without acknowledging the consequences? If you want more sun for after work playtime, change your personal work schedule without forcing the rest of us to comply with your needs. Belittling other people -- "otherwise you just end up looking like a giant douche.... or a turd sandwich" -- doesn't make you look more intelligent or strengthen your argument.

      --
      signature pending slashdot approval
    32. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by dami99 · · Score: 1

      Exactly.

      The only reason Canada switched was to stay on the same times as the US, for economic reasons.

      IMO, Saskatchewan is the only province to have it right.

    33. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by packeteer · · Score: 1

      i heard there are bears outside...

      --
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    34. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a) my power rarely goes out. once every few years.
      b) my clock has an amazing feature called a backup battery.
      c) this is all moot, i rarely need to be anywhere.

    35. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Stanistani · · Score: 1

      How I remember it - "Spring Forward, Fall Apart."

    36. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Actually, you have to deal with its time FOUR times a year. 2x for the regulated switches, and 2x to bring it back when the machine thinks it's supposed to switch.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    37. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by WhyDoYouWantToKnow · · Score: 1

      1) A significant amount of manpower had to be expended in order to assure that the computer systems across the world supporting this change were ready for it.

      Yep, like we really needed another example of why certain things just shouldn't be hard coded. It's not like Congress hasn't ever changed when Daylight Saving Time starts and ends. Well, there was that time in 1973 when DST was observed year round. Or in the 1960's when Iowa had 23 different pairs of DST start and end dates. We obviously should have taken after the more enlightened Europeans. They, after all, didn't have uniformity of DST until 1996. But when they did get uniform, we were off by 1 week in the spring.

      Just like with the year, this is something that should never have been hard coded.

      --
      "Oh drat these computers, they're so naughty and so complex. I could pinch them."
      Marvin the Martian
    38. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This was a widely supported idea beyond just the US - a number of countries followed suit in the idea.

      It wasn't SUPPORTED so much as FORCED ON THEM. Most countries that went along with it had no choice (Canada for example). The US announced they were doing it regardless of any support. That means any countries not following suit, but doing business with the US was bound to run into alot of time confusion when their timezones stopped matching the US'.

    39. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Nos. · · Score: 1

      Canada did not follow, certain provinces did. As the link you pointed out clearly states, time is under provincial jurisdiction. We here in Saskatchewan don't change our clocks based on seasons.

    40. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 0, Troll
      Being late for work because the power went off and came back on in the middle of the night

      If you need an alarm clock to get up in the morning you're not going to bed early enough. And don't argue that you 'can't go to bed earlier.' If you live in Seattle and go to bed in the winter 'early' at 9pm it's already midnight in New York, so just live on New York time instead :)

    41. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While we're at it, let's just repeal the shit altogether -- honestly, it's really the dumbest thing, ever. Arizona and Australia already "get it." Removing it completely will mean we'll NEVER have to revisit the decision. Ever.

    42. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by smith6174 · · Score: 1

      What kind of economic reasons would matter? What difference is there between the time changing when crossing the border and the time changing when you move to a different time zone? Being further north, Canada's concern over seasonal changes in daylight should outway any of our moronic attempts to save electricity.

    43. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Robber+Baron · · Score: 1

      Some tiny number of people had to wrestle with Windows inanity


      Tiny number?!? Where in hell have you been?
      This was a major headache for a LOT of sysadmins! It buggered Win 2k systems, it buggered Exchange, it buggered Crackberry, and for what?
      As far as the "benefits" you've cited go, they could also have been acrued simply by people getting up an hour earlier! No need to frig around with system clocks in order to do that!
      --

      You're using her as bait, Master!

    44. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by profplump · · Score: 1

      You say that Windows use is voluntary, and I'll agree, so long as you agree that working 9-5 is voluntary. And that being so, you could find a job that let you work whatever hours you wanted, having daylight before or after work as you saw fit, without the hassle of the changing the clock or anyone else's schedule at all.

    45. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by nsayer · · Score: 2, Informative
      In an ideal world they'd keep pushing it back until the start and end finally met,

      This would cause problems in northern latitudes during the winter. The sun potentially wouldn't rise until very late in the morning, which would be tres suck. The last time they tried this was during WWII, and there was a noted rise in the early morning accident rate in the winter. Of course, you could also partially blame that on the blackouts, but then without War Time the blackouts wouldn't have had as much impact in the later morning hours.

    46. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by pkulak · · Score: 1

      An alarm clock that I really liked now needs to be reset twice a year. Ahead an hour when DST starts early, and then back again when it tries to set itself a month later. That alone is enough to make me wine.

    47. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by raju1kabir · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Tiny number?!? Where in hell have you been?

      There are almost 400 million people in the USA. A tiny number of those are Windows sysadmins.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    48. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by sanso999 · · Score: 1

      Um....change the time the alarm is set to go off, no?

    49. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by shawn(at)fsu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I was late to work that day because no alarm clock whether it be cell phone or manual alarm could cope with the automatic change.

      What do you mean no manual alarm could cope? How did manual alarms cope before the change? Thats right you set it before you went to bed, This isn't rocket science. One more point. The Time change occurred on Sunday morning at or about 2am. You had a whole day to look at your clock and figure out it was a hour off before you went to be Sunday night. It's not DST fault you were late to work it was your fault. Nice try though

      Oh and for the record my cell phone did change on it's own on time.

      --
      500 dollar reward for tip(s) leading to the arrest of the person(s) who stole my sig.
    50. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by MMC+Monster · · Score: 1

      I got one of these for christmas a couple years ago. It's an atomic clock version, which picks up the exact time being broadcast from an atomic clock somewhere and then adjust it based on my time zone.

      Nice to keep in the basement so that the rare times I am down there I have an idea what time it is.

      Now useless for a couple weeks a year.

      --
      Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
    51. Re: Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are the dummy that bought a stupid clock. I shouldn't have to pay for your mistake.

      Me, I got something that gets a signal from the invisible airwaves, a so-called Atomic Clock. Guess what? My alarm went off just perfect Sunday morning because I didn't buy something stupid.

      The new hours are great, I have become aquainted with this large bright ball in the sky, I think it is called the Sun.... Sure I've lost my attractive pasty complexion, but all-in-all it is a worthwhile tradeoff.

    52. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by DesertBlade · · Score: 1

      You should be able to disable this feature. Not all locations even practice DST, Arizona and Hawaii don't.

      --
      Half of writing history is hiding the truth.
    53. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by prockcore · · Score: 1

      At the very least, it didn't HURT anything


      It hurt this guy
    54. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by compro01 · · Score: 1

      You should be able to disable this feature. Not all locations even practice DST, Arizona and Hawaii don't.

      same with Saskatchewan and anything that automatically changes my time around annoys me to no end.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    55. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      If you need an alarm clock to get up in the morning you're not going to bed early enough.

      And if you need a car to get to work, you live too far from work. Useless statements that demean others and give no useful information will not win people over to your side. Most Americans like to very little before work. They sleep until the last possible moment. You may look down upon such things, but just because you don't like it doesn't make it wrong. Let me guess, you have no TV and are quite proud of that fact.

    56. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by codemachine · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yet most people in Saskatchewan would bitch about how behind the times the province is for not going along with the idiocy that is DST.

      Any oil companies based in Alberta (which observes DST) just have their Saskatchewan employees go to work an hour earlier in the summer. Which proves it really isn't that hard to change your business hours to accomodate the season.

      I think this is a case where Saskatchewan is so far "behind the times" that they may be more "modern" than everyone else. With the 9-5 workday losing significance all the time, DST is already becoming less and less relevant anyhow. It will likely continue to be less relevant until it is finally abolished. Hopefully Saskatchewan doesn't decide to adopt it right before it becomes totally obsolete.

      As you said, I think Saskatchewan has it right, and I hope that they don't change it just to be like everyone else. Because in this instance, what everyone else is doing doesn't make sense anymore.

    57. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by ElectricRook · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They convened for fewer days than any Congress in a hundred years.

      You say that like it's a bad thing...

      Congress _not_ imposing their personal culture (lawyer culture at that) on folks living 3K miles away is a much better thing.

      --
      - High Tech workers, please say NO to Union Carpenters, their Union sees fit to control our compensation.
    58. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by mark-t · · Score: 1

      I live in Canada, and I can tell you that we followed out of economic necessity, and no other reason

      It still makes no sense that Canada followed the USA in this.

      Canada itself has distinct 7 time zones... any one province is going more out of synch with regards to timekeeping with the rest of the country than it is with any state in the US, regardless of what the time is supposed to be just on the other side of the Canada-US border.

    59. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      There are almost 400 million people in the USA. A tiny number of those are Windows sysadmins. Almost everyone who owns a computer...And the people who don't think of themselves as sysadmins were likely hit harder than those who do, as they're the folks who don't know jack about patching.

      Those with automatic updates were probably fine. Those without, well, they'll wonder why their computer didn't change the clock correctly with the rest of the country, and why it changed this past weekend. Twice a hassle, one more reason to hate computers.
    60. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      I presume that by "automatic clock", he's referring to one that syncs its time by radio, and thus theoretically didn't require (or have controls for) manual setting.

    61. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Copid · · Score: 1

      Why would you buy such a clock? Is it really too much effort for you to set your clock two times a year? I know I'm lazy, but this is ridiculous.
      The whole point of a clock is that you ask it what time it is and it tells you. If you have to tell your clock what time it is, it's not performing that function. I'd wager that most Americans forget to change their clocks during this ridiculous semi-annual exercise and end up working on the wrong schedule for at least part of the day. Having a clock that...well...tells the correct time during this confusing period can prevent missed appointments, missed flights, etc. It's not about the number of calories you burn changing the time. It's about what being an hour off in your schedule without realizing it can cost you.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    62. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Peter+Mork · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh and for the record my cell phone did change on it's own on time.

      So did mine ... 2 weeks after the new and improved DST. In fact, math would be much easier if pi were to equal 3. Why don't we just frak around with other constants. While we're at it, e is pretty close to 3.

      In short, why should I have to reset my alarm so that you can stay up an extra hour. When you go to bed is your business, not mine. Let's keep the Congress out of it!

    63. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by amper · · Score: 2

      Congress wasted time on this bill that could have been spent getting something important done, such as finally hammering out a definate government policy on Stem Cell research, abortions, or actually making a true impact on the energy issue we face.

      This may come as a shock to you, but the Supreme Court of the United States hammered out a definite policy on abortion way back in 1973.

    64. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Technician · · Score: 1

      My "automatic" clock that I bought a few years ago is now worthless.

      Not any more than a wristwatch, car clock, microwave oven clock or other DST dumb devices.

      I have to manually turn it ahead myself, then a few weeks later, remember to manually turn it back because it automatically went forward on the old scehdule. Ditto for the fall.

      Save yourself a few steps. Turn off DST.. Select a time zone to the East. In the fall move back to the correct time zone. My router at clock needed this fix.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    65. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by jbengt · · Score: 1

      I wish 9 to 5 was voluntary, it'd be a lot better than the 8:00 to 5:00 plus overtime I have to be at work.

      Let's get rid of of this summer/winter time switching. Just pick a time zone and stick to it already

    66. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by ryanov · · Score: 1

      You get free wine, why would you be complaining?

      I wish I could figure out how to make wine with an alarm clock!

    67. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by LordKronos · · Score: 3, Funny

      There are almost 400 million people in the USA

      You forgot the fine print:
      Margin of error: +/- 33%
    68. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by raju1kabir · · Score: 4, Funny

      You people have no vision. When I make a Slashdot comment, I want it to stand the test of time. We'll see who's laughing in 2050.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    69. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by LordKronos · · Score: 2, Funny

      you set it before you went to bed

      That may work alright in the spring, but what happens when fall comes around?

      -time for bed...let me just adjust my alarm clock first....
      -oh, look...I still have an hour before bed. I'll go watch the TV
      -that's odd, my favorite show isn't on at its usual time .......
      -time for bed...let me just adjust my alarm clock first....
    70. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The poster may work "A" shift of a compressed work week, e.g. 0600-1800 or 0700-1900 Sunday - Tuesday and alternating Wednesdays, instead of a M-F 8x5 job. Compressed work week schedules are standard fare for wafer fabs and electronic manufacturers.

    71. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by pkulak · · Score: 1

      Touché

    72. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      Do they not have power failures where you come from? Being late for work because the power went off and came back on in the middle of the night, blowing away your alarm clock's settings is one reason you might want one of these clocks.

      My clock winds, you insensitive clod!

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    73. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      I liked going to work in sunlight. Sunlight is nice. Then just as I was almost able to drive to work in the sun for the first time this year, they kicked this DST into effect. Only now is the daylight finally getting closer again.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    74. Re: Quit'cher Bitchin' by jamonterrell · · Score: 1

      You are the dummy that bases his life around the arbitrary changing of time by another set of dummies, and doesn't have a problem with it. Which is worse?

      --
      I can count to 1023 on my hands. Ask me about #132.
    75. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by SScorpio · · Score: 2, Funny

      Exactly, and my fucking alarm clock now as the exact same issue where I have to manually change the time twice and there is no patch for it. I just have to put up with it until I replace it which if it's like my last clock won't be for at least another decade.

    76. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by arodland · · Score: 1

      Just because a number of other countries have complete and utter idiots doesn't mean that it's any more excusable to follow the advice of the complete and utter idiots in this one. Patching systems has an economic impact -- a negative one. Not patching systems has an economic impact -- a negative one. And changing clocks has had no positive effect on the economy or the environment. So yep. They screwed us. Again. It's not the worst they've ever screwed us. In fact, it's not as bad as a hundred other ways they're screwing us right now. But I'm not into stoicism. Bitching is warranted.

    77. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Pulse_Instance · · Score: 1

      I don't think most people wondered why their computers clock didn't change, they probably just changed it when they saw it was out of sync. They probably don't care at all, it was just another clock to change, if anything they might notice it change on the proper date and then change it again, they probably don't care at all.

    78. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The goal was to reduce power consumed by large corporations."

      A better start would be publicly flogging IT managers who push Windows patches to all the clients at 2:00 AM, so we have to leave the PCs on overnight and the whoever thought up the policy of leaving all our building lights on 24/7 "for safety reasons".

    79. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by chochos · · Score: 1

      It's accurate - Mexico didn't follow. We just changed to DST last weekend.

    80. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by t0rkm3 · · Score: 1

      Actually working with Windows is voluntary. I work in a Winders free environment. I admin 300 or so firewalls (PIX, Nokia IPSO/CKP-NGX, or SPLAT/NGX), 20 IPS/IDS (Cisco, SourceFire), a cadre of Linux boxes (logging, SNMP, SMTP relay, NetFlow aggregation), and my workstations (Debian).

      I have managed to not admin a single Winders installation for the last 7yrs. (Except for a favor to a buddy.)

      Everything is voluntary, are you willing to do the work to get what you want?

    81. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by debest · · Score: 1

      Yes, but everyone's already used to Saskatchewan having the good sense to not follow DST. Once DST comes around, we re-think the number of hour difference for Saskatchewan when we need to deal with Saskatchewan.

      My point was that most of Canada and the States use DST, so it would be really stupid for "Eastern Daylight Time" in Canada to not be the same as "Eastern Daylight Time" in the United States for 3 weeks in the spring, then go back to being in sync for the summer, then being out of sync for (I think) another 3 weeks, then be in sync for the winter. That would suck!

      --
      Look at the tomato! Isn't it sad? He can't dance! Poor tomato!
    82. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by alanshot · · Score: 1

      What do you mean no manual alarm could cope? How did manual alarms cope before the change? Thats right you set it before you went to bed, This isn't rocket science. One more point. The Time change occurred on Sunday morning at or about 2am. You had a whole day to look at your clock and figure out it was a hour off before you went to be Sunday night. It's not DST fault you were late to work it was your fault. Nice try though

      What about my non-reprogrammable gizmos like VCRs, Mini DV Camcorders, etc that if I want to work as originally intended, I need to either buy a new one or send back to the manufacturer for cleaning/service/updating(at a flat fee of $300 each for my Camcorders) if I want them to work as originally designed.

      And thats on top of the week that I wasted strictly on patching my boxes for this mayhem, researching which ones were fixable and which had to be converted to UTC because the vendor stopped supporting them! Too bad I am salaried, otherwise I could use all that overtime pay to replace those gizmos and be back to normal. BAH!

      all so some freakin polar bear can have ice for another week due to the reduced emissions, saved energy, etc. Bah! Just slaughter them for steaks and be done with it.

      and as for the hordes of kids that we supposedly save because we didnt run them over as they waited at the bus stop in the dark? Screw them. if they arent smart or fast enough to get out of the road when they see headlight coming, ta-da! Darwin at his finest.

    83. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by kisielk · · Score: 1

      I've never been late for work because of that. My alarm clocks have a battery backup, or I just use the alarm on my cell phone.

    84. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhmm clearly you don't get up very early in the morning, especially in the winter... That hour you so blissfully go on about is stolen from the beginning of the day so in mid winter in oh say Seattle the sun won't fekking come up till after 8 AM or later which trust me adds a big quality of life deficit to many many peoples lives... now lets see what happens when we look at oh say Juneau...

    85. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by toddestan · · Score: 1

      The solution for those was to temporarly set them to be one time zone east for 3 weeks. Of course, some US-centric models don't allow this if you are already in eastern time.

    86. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 1
      Useless statements that demean others

      Huh? Virtually everything I read tells me lots of people on here are sleep-deprived. For thousands of years humans got up without alarm clocks - If you're going to be late for work because you don't have an alarm then you're not going to bed early enough.

      ...and I own three televisions :)

    87. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Doctor+Faustus · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, a huge number of people get a quality-of-life boost from the extra daylight in the evening, which makes it more pleasant to walk home from work, to run late-afternoon errands, or just to enjoy some time outdoors on nice spring and autumn days.
      And high school students everywhere are waiting for the bus when it's still pitch black.

    88. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by 1lus10n · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, a huge number of people get a quality-of-life boost from the extra daylight in the evening, which makes it more pleasant to walk home from work, to run late-afternoon errands, or just to enjoy some time outdoors on nice spring and autumn days.

      Thats a matter of opinion, and yours happens to be wrong.

      --
      "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." --Albert Einstein
    89. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by NuGeo · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Meanwhile, a huge number of people get a quality-of-life boost from the extra daylight in the evening, which makes it more pleasant to walk home from work, to run late-afternoon errands, or just to enjoy some time outdoors on nice spring and autumn days
      What about the people who enjoy having daylight in the morning hours? Just as spring gets closer and my first waking moment of the day is greeted with natural light shining through the window, DST comes and puts my morning into darkness for another month. I find that to be rather depressing. Ever consider how it may negatively affect the quality of life for others?
    90. Re: Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are the dummy that bases his life around the arbitrary changing of time by another set of dummies, and doesn't have a problem with it. Which is worse?

      High schoolers who haven't had a course in logic yet. Although idiots (or fools, not sure which) who can not handle the simple task of purchasing a clock are a close 2nd.

      And for your information, sonny, I base my life around a beautiful woman and the sun rises and sets based on her smile. You're just lucky to live in the same era as her so kwitcher bitchin.

    91. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spelling it "Winders" is almost as bad as spelling it micro$oft or microsloth or any of the other HI-LARIOUS ways that oh so clever geeks choose to spell it.

    92. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      Don't forget the cost of terabytes (petabytes?) of bandwidth cost for system updates for the DST change. I am in Istanbul and even I got the updates here.

      I remember the OS X DST update was 8 MB and if you needed new update to Java which includes DST too was a massive dual arch package and both were of course marked as "critical system updates".

      Lets not forget frustrated Apple customers who didn't like the idea of 3rd party patch for OS X 10.2.8 too. Thanks to 3rd party guys but thank God they were nice guys, a evil team could make first ever successful/working OS X trojan since it naturally needs Admin password.

    93. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Galactic+Dominator · · Score: 0

      You mean as in forcing a nation to adjust its clocks for no reason?

      --
      brandelf -t FreeBSD /brain
    94. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you mean, if you want it to work as designed or intended? Throughout human history, people and companies have invented and sold products which CLAIMED to do whatever neat thing, which after getting them home, the buyer discovered was either an outright lie or as near enough to one to be useless.

      You've got nothing to stand on expecting a product to actually DO anything. It may be complete junk. It may not work. And even if it does work, it might eventually stop working for no obvious reason. Such it has been for, forever.

      I do agree about the school kids. Why are we so busy worrying about them instead of worrying about screwing up the lives of the people who have jobs and actually contribute something to society? When was the last time a snot-nose schoolkid actually contributed a thing to society? They don't have jobs. They don't employ workers. They don't actually DO anything of value, and certainly nothing particularly unique from one kid to the next. They're interchangeable like temp workers from a labor pool, and they do about as much work too.

      So it should not matter if a few more or less of them get mowed down by cars every year. Worry not about them. Worry about adults who make the money that makes the wheels of society turn. Kids? Lose one, grow another. Big deal.

    95. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was thinking along the lines of a rooster, but expensive atomic clocks were fucked. At the store today, I saw a clock that advertised that it had built in DST tables for the next 100 years so it wouldn't need adjusting.

    96. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was also a large increase in the number of buildings that exploded - I'm sure that was also due to no DST change at the time... Kidding of course :)

    97. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by totally+bogus+dude · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And if they did "just change it" like their clocks on their microwave and VCR, then they've probably actually set their computer's clock forward one hour, rather than setting the timezone correctly.

      This has the nice affect that any time their computer tries to communicate with another device, it's now announcing it has the wrong time. The most obvious effect will be in the Date: header in emails which will be an hour out; it could also have some affect on things like HTTP caching (the Last-Modified and Expires headers specify a time in UTC).

      Computers and other network-connected devices are not "just another clock", and most people don't realise you need to adjust the timezone, not just the time shown by the clock in system tray.

      I'm in Western Australia which last summer* had DST for the first time in ages, and this was a significant problem -- made worse by the fact that Microsoft apparently didn't give a shit. We had problems with Exchange appointments for a long time because MSFT couldn't be bothered updating part of the system (it seems Exchange uses some other way of determining timezones other than the system timezone database..?).

      * - our summer being Dec-Feb, and our first DST trial period just ended.

    98. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by stormpunk · · Score: 1

      Robots, that's who.

    99. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Frozen+Void · · Score: 1

      The coalition of the willing.heh.

    100. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by adrianmonk · · Score: 1

      It didn't hurt anything? My "automatic" clock that I bought a few years ago is now worthless.
      [ . . . ] The government owes me a new automatic clock.

      Depending on why you bought it, the clock manufacturer might be the one who owes you a new clock. Just after the law was passed that changed the schedule, which I believe was about 2 years ago, I was in the market for an automatic clock. So I shopped around a bit, and I discovered it was hard to tell how these clocks actually worked from the piss-poor labeling on the boxes I saw in the stores. Having just gotten my first cell phone, I thought, hey, this is a perfect opportunity to use it to do something I've never been able to do before, and I started calling the manufacturers' 1-800 numbers while right there in the store to ask them questions. (Ooh! That is so cool! I'm right here in the store and I can call the manufacturer!)

      After an infuriating conversation with one person whose answer to every question was "it has a microchip inside it, which is like a computer brain" (which wouldn't have been so bad had she not angrily insisted it was a valid answer), I eventually talked to some people who actually knew something. It turns out there are two types of clocks which are both labeled "automatic". The first kind is slaved to a radio clock (specifically, the US Government's WWVB radio in Fort Collins, CO, which covers a good chunk of the entire continent). The second kind is simply nothing but a clock that doesn't sync to anything at all and which some person (probably a marketing or product development person) has decided is accurate enough that they can remove the knob to set it! These do have buttons and knobs so you can set the time zone, and they have calendars so they will adjust for DST, but the actual oscillator in them can't be adjusted, and of course the DST schedule can't be changed either.

      Now, here's the irritating part: when I called all these people, I asked all of them how their clocks were going to cope with the change in DST rules coming in 2007. They all basically said I would have to do exactly what you did: set it twice in the fall and twice in the spring. I asked them why I would want to buy an "automatic" clock that was actually twice as much work as a regular clock, and none of them really had an answer. But the point is this: the companies that made the clocks knew all about this and continued to sell clocks that they knew 2 years in advance would not work right. They had time to design new models and they didn't.

      On a side note, another thing I figured out that the clock industry has a special code word for "clock which has the ability to slave itself to a radio signal". That code word is "atomic". It makes a certain amount of sense since ultimately WWVB's time is derived from an atomic clock. But the same thing is true of ntpd, and nobody calls it "atomic".

    101. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about my non-reprogrammable gizmos like VCRs, Mini DV Camcorders, etc

      I don't think I've ever seen a consumer device that has a clock that is not reprogrammable.

    102. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by pe1chl · · Score: 1

      What do you mean no manual alarm could cope? How did manual alarms cope before the change?

      I am not in the USA but my alarm clock has been following DST for nearly 20 years, actually now I have my second alarm clock that does so.
      It receives a longwave timestandard transmitter in Germany, and that transmits DST information. The clock neatly steps from 2:00 to 3:00 at the right moment, and when this changes the only people who have to worry are the guys operating the timestandard transmitter.

      Those clocks are very inexpensive here. I have several in my house. At the moment of DST change I only need to change the clock in my microwave and my car.

    103. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by raju1kabir · · Score: 1

      Uhmm clearly you don't get up very early in the morning, especially in the winter... That hour you so blissfully go on about is stolen from the beginning of the day so in mid winter in oh say Seattle the sun won't fekking come up till after 8 AM or later which trust me adds a big quality of life deficit to many many peoples lives...

      No matter how you look at it, there are more people awake at 5pm than at 8am - more people benefit from the late afternoon sun.

      Where I live, it never gets light before about 7:15am. I don't see anyone depressed about it, they're all just brushing their teeth and getting ready for work anyway. The number of people out jogging or walking their dogs in the morning is miniscule compared to the number in the evening.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    104. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by raju1kabir · · Score: 1

      If they're still afraid of the dark at that age, they should be in therapy, not in school.

      Starting when I was 6, I had to walk to school for half an hour in the dark in wintertime. I survived. And that was back when abductions and other violent crimes against children were at a higher rate than they are now.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
    105. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by TempeTerra · · Score: 3, Funny

      If you're futureproofing, do it right: 640 million people should be enough for anyone.

      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
    106. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      But it won't count by then, because it won't be America by then. The country will have been liquidated to cover its debts and annexed by China.

      (It's humorous that people want to 'think of the children' except when it comes to taking out trillions in debt they never intend to pay back.)

      --
      It's been a long time.
    107. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by gsslay · · Score: 1

      In an ideal world they'd keep pushing it back until the start and end finally met, and then abolish it entirely, leaving the clocks on summer time all year round.

      Yeah, that'd be a great idea. So that you spend all winter getting up in the middle of the night because the clock says its morning. A proposal like yours really shafts those in more northern latitudes.

    108. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by walt-sjc · · Score: 1

      You would have to pay me more to admin windows systems. The interesting thing is that Windows admins make less. Make of that what you will.

    109. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Phisbut · · Score: 1

      No matter how you look at it, there are more people awake at 5pm than at 8am - more people benefit from the late afternoon sun.

      People who are not awake at 8am are usually still at work at 5pm, under artificial lighting, using up energy. DST does nothing for them.

      --
      After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
      - The Tao of Programming
    110. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      But how do you set the time if you're on an ocean cruise off the East Coast?

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    111. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by alanshot · · Score: 1

      "I don't think I've ever seen a consumer device that has a clock that is not reprogrammable."

      you missed the point. yes they can all be reprogrammed manually. The way it was designed to work, you set the clock, and tell it whether DST is followed or not. From that point forward (in theory) you never touch the clock again unless there is a loss of power because it would automatically adjust itself.

      My point was that I purchased a device that once I set the clock, it would automatically change the time at the appropriate intervals to follow DST. Now that Congress made this apparently worthless change, I now have 40 clock changes per year instead of 20 since half my devices with clocks were designed to switch automatically, but no longer do so properly.

    112. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by 2short · · Score: 1


      The majority of congresspeople are not, and have never been, lawyers. There are quite a few lawyers, which is probably a good thing since their job is to make laws.

      But in any case, I don't think it's a plus to take vacation most of the time, just to show up occasionally and rubber stamp what the lobbyists and/or President have worked out for you. Working fewer days than anyone ever before didn't prevent them from spending more of my money than anyone ever before.

      I used to think that if I disagreed with some elected official, it would be better if they were incompetent. Experience has disabused me of this notion.

    113. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      And for thousands of years, work time was determined by the sun, and not an arbitrary number on your boss's clock. We are in the Arbitrary age. I would get up for work about 95% of the time without an alarm. Much of the time I'm up about 5 minutes before my alarm goes off. But those other 5% of the time would really piss my boss off. So alarm clock it is.

    114. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by TilJ · · Score: 1

      Absolutely! Well said.

      I'd go a step further and propose the use of UTC worldwide rather than timezones, we could merely shift our "normal" hours to match. For example, in Saskatchewan I'm UTC -0600, so my regular working hours could be 0200 to 1100. Relative terms like "noon" would still work, it'd just be at 0600 locally.

      --
      "The purpose of argument is to change the nature of truth." -- Bene Gesserit Precept
    115. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by SirBruce · · Score: 1

      >The majority of congresspeople are not, and have never been, lawyers.

      Actually, a quick google search will turn up statistics that from 1937-1968, the perentage of lawyers in the House ranged from 55% to 59%, and in the Senate 57% to 74%. So at one time, the majority of them were indeed lawyers. The trend has been downward; in 1999, 43% of all Congress were lawyers. As of last year (again according to google), 36% of the House were lawyers and 53% of the Senate, or 39% overall.

    116. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by pfleming · · Score: 1

      In an ideal world they'd keep pushing it back until the start and end finally met, and then abolish it entirely, leaving the clocks on summer time all year round. But until that time, at least things are a bit better. And next time they change it, you Windows-wrestlers will know what to do.

      So how's about we just don't observe it at all? You want to be up earlier, more power to you. You get later light regardless of what time it shows on the clock. Get home with more daylight means running the AC more when you get there. That "quality of life" means that kids end up walking to school and their bus stops that much earlier. I don't see the benefit and am glad to live in a state that doesn't observe it, except faintly across the horizon.
    117. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep... An FBI sting operation catches William Jefferson accepting a $100k bribe. His freezer has $90k of cash in it. Congressional leaders bitch loudly about separation of powers when the FBI executes a search warrant on his congressional office.

      The justice dept attorney sat on the case. He was fired. Now congressional blowhards are demanding the Attorney General resign, they are demanding his aides testify before congress. And the news media let don't call them out on their shit.

    118. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by 2short · · Score: 1

      Actually, my compliments on your willingness to do simple research, but you have misread my statement.

      While the majority *has* consisted of lawyers in past congresses, the majority of (current) congresspeople are not, and *have* never been lawyers. My use of the plural "have" attaches the dependent clause to the similarly plural "congresspeople", not to the singular "majority".

      Pedantry aside, I continue to maintain that a significant amount of legal expertise is desirable in a body charged with making law.

    119. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the device recieves the time from an outside source, the device should take the DST change in stride provided the source is updated properly. That's what my cell phone did. The only devices that are a problem are the ones that have the dates of DST changes hardcoded in advance.

    120. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by nsayer · · Score: 1

      Ha ha. Actually, there was no such increase. War time didn't start until after Pearl Harbor and the only other enemy attack on areas covered by War Time (North American U.S. territory) was the Japanese invasion of the allutian islands (which was largely unopposed) and a number of balloon bombs that exploded in the Pacific North West in the latter stages of the war. One of those bombs killed 6 people (the only North American civilian casualties of enemy action for the entire war), but none damanged any structures (so far as I am aware).

    121. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by ahoehn · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, a huge number of people get a quality-of-life boost from the extra daylight in the evening, which makes it more pleasant to walk home from work, to run late-afternoon errands, or just to enjoy some time outdoors on nice spring and autumn days.

      How is losing my excuse for not exerciseing when I come home from work (darkness being that excuse) a quality of life boost. Now I have to feel guilty every day when I come home and sit around instead of being able to say, "I certainly do wish it were light out so I could go ride my bicycle. This darkness is a real shame."

      Damn you DST.

      --
      Mod my comments down. It'll be fun.
    122. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by jZnat · · Score: 1

      I'd rather shop while it's dark (when there's nothing else to do outside your home) and do other stuff while it's light (e.g. BBQ, sports, friends, children if you have them).

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    123. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by kchrist · · Score: 1

      Have you considered the possibility that crime isn't the issue but general safety (for those riding bikes to school) and temperature (believe it or not, it's generally colder before sunrise) are?

    124. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like going home in sunlight. Sunlight is nice.

    125. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Pope · · Score: 1

      That pissed me off this year as well. The mornings were just starting to get light after I was coming out of the shower, and put me in a more energetic mood for my trip to work. Then BAM! back to bloody darkness for a couple of weeks.

      The change was stupid and unnecessary. And worst of all, sold to the US as being "good for the children," which is of course compelte bullshit since the mornings were getting lights and then were dark again.

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    126. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Pope · · Score: 1

      Shut up. It was a stupid change, totally unnecessary, and caused a lot of grief for a lot of people. They didn't "try" anything, despite your claim to the contrary. I'll criticize Bush and friends (ie Harper) for any reason I see fit, I don't need to muzzle my opinions because you think that "trying" is somehow above critique.

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    127. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by ElectricRook · · Score: 1

      a significant amount of legal expertise is desirable in a body charged with making law

      I understand your point. But I'm of the belief that too much legal expertise in a body charged with making law could cause the making of laws that favor those with legal expertise. For example, a friend wanted to buy a home in Virginia, and he was required by law to hire a lawyer. A few year back, a California lawmaker wanted to make lawyer jokes illegal.

      --
      - High Tech workers, please say NO to Union Carpenters, their Union sees fit to control our compensation.
    128. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Rakarra · · Score: 1
      1) A significant amount of manpower had to be expended in order to assure that the computer systems across the world supporting this change were ready for it.


      Semi-significant. It really wasn't that bad unless you had systems that were difficult to upgrade (as a sysadmin in a heterogeneous environment it still wasn't too bad.


      2) A number of home and business computer systems alike failed to change, sometimes resulting in mischeduled meetings and moderate confusion.


      Possibly. Neither #1 and #2 however, outweigh the greatest benefits of the change -- actually having a few sunlit hours after work. I'd like the DST schedule year-round. I like being able to bike home from work, a dangerous idea around here when it gets dark.


      3) Congress wasted time on this bill that could have been spent getting something important done, such as finally hammering out a definate government policy on Stem Cell research, abortions, or actually making a true impact on the energy issue we face.


      I consider this a benefit, not a waste. Often when Congress tries to "hammer out an issue," I end up wishing they hadn't bothered, with the solution being worse than simply doing nothing. Whatever wastes Congress's time is fine by me.

    129. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Rakarra · · Score: 1
      Working fewer days than anyone ever before didn't prevent them from spending more of my money than anyone ever before.


      It takes very little time to throw money at a project/issue. It takes a lot more time trying to figure out how to spend money wisely on it.

    130. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by 2short · · Score: 1


      I'm familiar with the argument, though I haven't seen the evidence. Having once bought a house in Virginia without hiring a lawyer, I assume your friends case involves more specifics. Proposing to make lawyer jokes illegal sounds like, itself, a joke; it wasn't enacted in any case.

      But I'm sure there are examples of laws arguably biased in favor of lawyers. On the other hand, I know there are plenty of examples of laws that suck due to their authors lack of legal expertise. That are too porly written to be comprehensible, or conflict with existing law in unintended, but obvious ways, or that are just obviously unconstitutional.

    131. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      I had both, until the Yanks decided that sunlight in the morning is too much to ask.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    132. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 1
      And for thousands of years, work time was determined by the sun

      Yes, which for most of the year comes up before people get up to go to work. They got up earlier than we do, yet they had no alarm clocks. How? They went to bed earlier.

  3. Shocked by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 3, Funny

    I thought feel-good legislation always worked. :-/

    1. Re:Shocked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the point of even having a clock change anymore? As of this year, we only have what - three or perhaps four months of standard time and the rest of the year is daylight saving time?

      Frankly, I'd rather have it in reverse. I like it when there is more light in the morning and I like it to be dark earlier at night. There's just something nice about it getting dark at 5pm or so. But I guess we're not going to get that for the same reason that people love to sit out and bake in the sun.

    2. Re:Shocked by Ucklak · · Score: 1

      Move to Arizona or Hawaii.

      --
      if you steal from one source, that is plagiarism, if you steal from many, well, that's just research.
  4. I like the extra daylight though by MontyApollo · · Score: 0, Troll

    As many have said, I like the extra daylight. It would be nice if it saves energy, but the extra daylight is more important to me.

    1. Re:I like the extra daylight though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it seems like each day since DST has been a minute or two longer than the day before. It's amazing how they can force the sun to stay up a bit longer just by messing with everybody's clock.

    2. Re:I like the extra daylight though by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      As many have said, I like the extra daylight.


      The time change did not affect the amount of daylight, or the number of hours over which that daylight was distributed.

      It may have affected hour your work schedule corresponded to the daylight hours, but that's a completely different thing.
    3. Re:I like the extra daylight though by slashrogue · · Score: 1

      I can smell the sarcasm off this post, so it makes me wonder what the mods are doing with +Interesting.

    4. Re:I like the extra daylight though by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      You know, there isn't really any increase in the total daylight per day. But if the change in schedule works for you anyway, that's great. I find such forced change annoying and patronizing.

      Actually, I think the problem is numerically bigger than what the 1-hour change tries to correct. It's more like 4 hours, considering a night's sleep from midnight to 8 am. So to maximize daylight during waking hours, you'd have to change the physical midnight to be about 4 am. Wouldn't that be great?

      What I'm trying to say is that most humans have a very asymmetric schedule compared to physical hours of light and dark. If you try to force people out of the asymmetry, they will eventually drift back into a new kind of asymmetry. I also like it when the time on a clock bears some vague resemblance to physical events like midnight.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    5. Re:I like the extra daylight though by Cornish · · Score: 1

      The two extra minutes of daylight you had on March 11th were due to the Earth's orbit around the sun, not because Congress monkeyed with Daylight Saving Time.

    6. Re:I like the extra daylight though by mgabrys_sf · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is why Arizona doesn't participate in this stupidity.

      Extra daylight in the FRIGGING DESERT is NOT helpful. People don't come out until after 7pm even in normal time. Want the cafes and outdoor busineses to stay closed until 1030pm, or do you want them to waste more water with those evaporative coolers (garden misters) trying to keep the locals from passing out outdoors? Until nightfall they're all sucking every last watt out of their homes barricaded inside on air-conditioned life-support! Cool evenings save energy. The sooner it arrives the better, and less energy and water is used as a result. And don't get me started on heat islands!

      It's not 59-90f degrees everywhere in the USA ya know.

    7. Re:I like the extra daylight though by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      The time change did not affect the amount of daylight, or the number of hours over which that daylight was distributed.

      Apparently, it all had no effect on the level of pedantism present on /. But that's hardly surprising, now is it?

    8. Re:I like the extra daylight though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      The time change did not affect the amount of daylight, or the number of hours over which that daylight was distributed.

      Check out the brain on Brad. OMG I THOUGHT CHANGING MY CLOCK TIME ACTUALLY ALTERED THE TILT OF THE EARTH!!1!!!111! Thank you DragonWriter!

    9. Re:I like the extra daylight though by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

      Extra daylight in the FRIGGING DESERT is NOT helpful.
      Hmmm....

      People don't come out until after 7pm even in normal time. Want the cafes and outdoor busineses to stay closed until 1030pm, or do you want them to waste more water with those evaporative coolers (garden misters) trying to keep the locals from passing out outdoors? Until nightfall they're all sucking every last watt out of their homes barricaded inside on air-conditioned life-support!
      Hmmm....

      Cool evenings save energy. The sooner it arrives the better, and less energy and water is used as a result. And don't get me started on heat islands!
      Hmmm....

      It's not 59-90f degrees everywhere in the USA ya know.
      Hmmm.... In that situation, I would reconsider my choice to live in an area that would be affected by global temperature increases. Oh, wait....

    10. Re:I like the extra daylight though by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      As many have said, I like the extra daylight.

      I live far north and to the western edge of a time zone. I just wish that extra daylight didn't come at the expense of driving to work in the dark at 8:00 AM.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    11. Re:I like the extra daylight though by Chosen+Reject · · Score: 1

      First off, not all AZ is wicked hot. However, when I lived in Glendale, the heat was exactly what I enjoyed. Now I'm living in the frigid land of the north where in the winter they go off DST and no one goes out doors because it's so cold and the sun ain't shining no more. After nightfall they're all sucking every last watt out of their homes barricaded inside a heated life-support. Warm evenings save energy.

      It's not 50-60f degrees everywhere in the USA during Winter ya know.

      --
      Stop Global Warming!
      Just say no to irreversible processes!
    12. Re:I like the extra daylight though by gferguson · · Score: 1

      You know, if the frikken government would spend as much of their own energy and time telling people to NOT move to the stinkin' desert as they did messing with people's clocks, then we'd save huge amounts of electricity and water.

      I'm a native of Arizona and have lived here over 50 years. I'm used to the heat but people who move here from somewhere else aren't. Their A/C units get set to 70 degrees, pools get filled daily and flushed every couple months to remove the salt accumulation caused by evaporation.

      There are areas that are hospitable for humans to live that require very little additional heating or cooling but the desert isn't it. Trying to change their environment to allow them to be comfortable is stupid. If they can't stand the heat then stay out of the desert.

      Sorry for the rant but it's a "hot" button for me.

    13. Re:I like the extra daylight though by 2short · · Score: 1

      Most people do have a very assymetrical schedule. My analysis is that most people don't want to get up before sunrise, even during most of the winter, but are happy to stay up after dark. Given that, the midnight-8 sleep schedule makes sense in the winter; but then people pin it to the clock, and don't adjust it in the summer when dawn comes earlier. So in that context, a seasonal adjustment of the clock, such as DST, makes sense.
      Most people can't set their own hour independently of the rest of society due to jobs, etc. To make a seasonal adjustment in a sychronized manner, it's going to be forced. Though, actually, if you can set your schedule seperately from others, it's not forced; just get up the same time you always did (by the sun), and reserve DST adjustment for comunicating with others.

      "I also like it when the time on a clock bears some vague resemblance to physical events like midnight."

      I agree on some aesthetic level, but I don't see a practical benefit. I set my clock based on my time zone, not strick astonomy, in any case.

    14. Re:I like the extra daylight though by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      The time change did not affect the amount of daylight, or the number of hours over which that daylight was distributed.

      Check out the brain on Brad. OMG I THOUGHT CHANGING MY CLOCK TIME ACTUALLY ALTERED THE TILT OF THE EARTH!!1!!!111! Thank you DragonWriter!


      Brad's post was quite relevant and necessary, as silly and obvious as it may seem to some people here.

      Remember, this DST change was done in the USA, and most of the readers here on /. (and esp. this article) are probably Americans. Also remember from a recent /. article, that 48% of Americans believe that Evolution is not only false, but not widely accepted by scientists. When you're dealing with a large population of people who literally believe the earth is 6,000 years old, it shouldn't be far-fetched that many them also might believe that changing their clocks' settings actually changes the total amount of daytime in a day.

    15. Re:I like the extra daylight though by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      There are areas that are hospitable for humans to live that require very little additional heating or cooling but the desert isn't it. Trying to change their environment to allow them to be comfortable is stupid. If they can't stand the heat then stay out of the desert.

      You talk about this like there's a lot of better places to live. There aren't. Every place is a compromise in some way.

      If you want truly good weather, there's only one place in the USA that really fits the bill: southern California. It's mild all year long, and doesn't rain much. Never too hot, never too cold. Only a few problems: 1) LA is already there, and it's a polluted, crime-infested hellhole. 2) San Diego is also there, and it's horrendously expensive. Oh I forgot, these places have huge earthquakes once in a while.

      Every place else has major problems. Places like North Dakota are simply far too cold; people freeze to death and aren't found until the snow thaws every year. The northeast is cold as well, and has a lot of storms. The southeast is too hot and humid, and has horrific hurricanes on a regular basis. The midwest (Iowa, etc.) has huge tornados, plus there's no employers there and it's mostly used for farming (remember, only a stupid population uses all their arable land for their cities instead of reserving it for agriculture). Any other seemingly in-between places probably don't have good employers for many professions.

      So for all the morons making fun of Arizonans for living in a desert, where exactly do you live that's so perfect? I'm sure I can name several things wrong with it as well. Here, the main problems are excessive summer heat, and a possible water shortage in the near future.

    16. Re:I like the extra daylight though by Skreems · · Score: 1

      I don't think the majority of the population is quite that stupid. What seems more likely to me is that people don't stop to think about it either way.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
    17. Re:I like the extra daylight though by feepness · · Score: 4, Funny

      As many have said, I like the extra daylight. It would be nice if it saves energy, but the extra daylight is more important to me.

      Now if they would only legislate it so the sun didn't set at all.

      I do not get this. My wife makes the same sort of comments. I tell her to put the baby to bed at 9pm if it's still too light at 8pm and she says the baby will be cranky because she is staying up too late.

      I used to try to explain. Now I just nod.

    18. Re:I like the extra daylight though by Peter+Mork · · Score: 1

      You are far too generous. When in doubt, assume stupidity.

    19. Re:I like the extra daylight though by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      I used to try to explain. Now I just nod.

      You are truly wise in the way of the husband.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    20. Re:I like the extra daylight though by Skreems · · Score: 1

      It's the optimist in me. Although now that you bring it up, I'm reminded of the truism that half the population has an IQ under 100. And that's freaking scary.

      --
      Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
      The Urban Hippie
  5. Don't foget about October.... (for the children) by Fallen+Kell · · Score: 1

    Remember that this also moved DST changes back after October 31st. So the candy companies love this and it is "safer for the children", even if it does nothing for energy usage. It will stay most likely.

    --
    We were all warned a long time ago that MS products sucked, remember the Magic 8 Ball said, "Outlook not so good"
  6. Fine by me... by garcia · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Reuters spoke with Jason Cuevas, spokesman for Southern Co. power, who said it plainly: "We haven't seen any measurable impact."

    While I had no doubts in my mind that this wouldn't save a dime, I'm still pleased with the fact that because I work 9:30 to 6pm I see daylight on my drive home three weeks earlier than usual. For me, I'd prefer it's this way all year long but I don't have kids that ride a school bus (isn't that the main reason they claim we do this in the first place?)

    1. Re:Fine by me... by DragonWriter · · Score: 1, Informative

      For me, I'd prefer it's this way all year long but I don't have kids that ride a school bus (isn't that the main reason they claim we do this in the first place?)


      The reason we do it is that people are more likely to shop if they get off work and it is still light out, and thus it is a way to subsidize retail and related industries (the theoretical energy savings are based on the assumption that businesses won't change their schedule and will consume constant power, but the people staying out shopping won't go home and turn on their home appliances.)
    2. Re:Fine by me... by jerkyjunkmail · · Score: 1
      I agree. I like the increase of daylight hours after work.

      I've heard that same line before as well. I say what about the after school activities type kid though. The way it was everyone gets out of school and it's fully light out. I used to play basketball in grade school. By the time practice was out it was really dark. So you have a lone young kid walking home alone in the dark instead the masses that would get let out when it's starting to get dark. I would think there would be better safety in numbers rather than the single kid that would in theory be easier prey. I say what about the lone kids doesn't anyone care about them and their safety.

      --

      --
      What is pirate software? Software for inventory of stolen treasure?
    3. Re:Fine by me... by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      Personally I'm less likely to shop when it is light out. I'd rather be outside than in a store. I do most of my shopping after sundown if I can.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    4. Re:Fine by me... by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      You could just work from 8:30 to 5pm....

      If you get flex-time, it wouldn't even need to be a company-wide change. This would be a much more astronomically correct solution than forcing everyone to pretend that the sun is ~15 degrees ahead of where it really is.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    5. Re:Fine by me... by 2short · · Score: 1

      "For me, I'd prefer it's this way all year long but I don't have kids that ride a school bus (isn't that the main reason they claim we do this in the first place?)"

      People claim a lot of things, but my opinion is doing it all year wouldn't work. Between school bus times, business hours, work schedules, and what have you, society decides what time to get up in the morning. It's not done in an organized or unmessy way, but it eventually comes back to if enough people think the time they have to get up is too late or too early, schedules will change. But not fast enough to track seasons. We wind up stuck with one "clock time" all year. I conclude people hate getting up before sunrise in the winter more than other considerations, so that sets our schedules, even though it's wildly inapropriate other times of year. So DST let's those millions of individual decisions about what time to do stuff get changed all together, and thus makes our schedule adapt to the seasons.

    6. Re:Fine by me... by danomac · · Score: 1

      ...but the people staying out shopping won't go home and turn on their home appliances.)

      Wait, we're supposed to turn off the appliances? Damn, I'd turn off my computers if I could find them!
    7. Re:Fine by me... by garcia · · Score: 1

      I don't have the luxury of choosing my hours so your point is moot.

    8. Re:Fine by me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention, if you're doing DST year-round, why not skip the technicalities and just legislatively change your timezone designation one slot east? (ie an Eastern timezone district on permanent EDT is effectively the same as an Atlantic timezone district that never uses DST). If they wanted the effect of year-round DST, they'd prolly just redraw the timezone map for Canada and the US to put everybody one slot east and forget DST altogether...

      -AC

    9. Re:Fine by me... by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      I hear you, it would probably take an act of congress to get employers to give people more choice in the hours they work.

      Sorry, I had to...

    10. Re:Fine by me... by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "Reuters spoke with Jason Cuevas, spokesman for Southern Co. power,"

      And what about from points further away from the Equator?

    11. Re:Fine by me... by maxume · · Score: 1

      Your argument that it is 'astronomically correct' is basically that it would be arbitrary, but based on more history. The correlation between the sun, what clocks say and what we call the thing that the clock says is all completely by our choice.

      I would actually prefer that people just keep schedules that work for them and so forth, and I would also prefer that the hour originally labeled for midday match the middle of the day, but it is all arbitrary.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    12. Re:Fine by me... by fm6 · · Score: 1

      You're still in school, right? If you were out in the real world, you'd know that very few people can choose exactly when they will work. Most people need to be available to their co-workers, customers, and suppliers on short notice. ("Sorry, sir, we can't sell you a cheeseburger — the flipper dude went home early.") The only way to do that is to have as many people as you can manage working at the same time.

    13. Re:Fine by me... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      In this era of skin cancer awareness, why would you want to expose yourself to MORE sunlight?

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    14. Re:Fine by me... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Well, it changed from light in the morning and dark at night to dark in the morning and light in the evening. So, which is safer for the kids? There isn't more sunlight, just moving it from running over kids in the morning to the evenings. And it doesn't really matter anyway, since waiting a month gives the extra hour of light anyway (well, waiting a week here, but most people aren't as far north).

    15. Re:Fine by me... by kisrael · · Score: 1

      The risk of skin cancer might be counterbalanced by Vitamin D processing and lowered heart attack risks.

      Just 'cause we're all pasty doesn't mean it's the best thing for us...

      For the record, energy shmenergy, I find it a useful hour of "extra" daylight and would have it all year long if I could.

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    16. Re:Fine by me... by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Blah.. vitamin supplements are safe, going out in the sun isn't.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    17. Re:Fine by me... by General+Fault · · Score: 5, Informative

      The people that know the most of anybody on the planet about forecasting the effects of DST sit about 20-50ft from me. We develop software that is designed to predict electrical and gas usage based on factors such as weather, time of day (including DST), holidays, etc. I wish they had asked us our opinions or at least used our software to forecast the effects of their new policy before enacting it. You see, DST was designed before A/C was in widespread use. DST saved electricity by shifting working hours into more daylight. However, with the advent of huge A/C and heat-pumps deployed in every office, factory and store in America, DST now shifts the workday into hotter hours. As a result the DST effect has slowly dwindled (with a little work I could tell you just how much it has dwindled), and will soon reverse. The new DST times are more than likely to accelerate the problem.

      --
      No man is an island... But I wouldn't mind having a bigger moat.
    18. Re:Fine by me... by tksh · · Score: 1

      But on the same token, for those of us with long commutes and have to be on the road before 7, I wake up and travel to work in the dark now. The few weeks before the DST change, I was able to get up with the sun, that was nice. We're just shifting the window, not actually extending anything. But hey, if these daylight hours are nice, why not just keep these hours all year round?

    19. Re:Fine by me... by prockcore · · Score: 1

      If you were out in the real world, you'd know that very few people can choose exactly when they will work.


      The Families and Work Institute found 43 percent of U.S. employees have access to traditional flextime, up from 29 percent in 1992. Managers, professionals and people in higher-paid jobs are more likely to have the option, but other jobs can be flexible as well.

      43% is a great deal more than "very few". And that study is 3 years old.
    20. Re:Fine by me... by kisrael · · Score: 1

      Errr.... huh.

      Not to totally underplay vitamins, but we I think it's reasonable to think that we don't always process pills the same way we do stuff from other sources.

      Don't fear the sun.

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    21. Re:Fine by me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, but Vitamin D isn't easily absorbed by the body orally.

    22. Re:Fine by me... by spearway · · Score: 1

      Actually DST is an invention from a English Lord in 1915 that wished he could play golf in the evening. It was fist implemented by the German and immediately all of Europe followed suit, and quickly abandoned the idea after the the war. It was revived in the 1970s as an energy saving tool but the saving have never been demonstrated. The only measurable effect is on golf...

    23. Re:Fine by me... by Mspangler · · Score: 1

      "I'm still pleased with the fact that because I work 9:30 to 6pm I see daylight on my drive home three weeks earlier than usual."

      And that's the people who like DST. I work 7:30 to 4 pm, and I don't like it. The shift workers work 6:30 to 6:30, and then hit the hay, so they're not getting a lot of benefit either.

    24. Re:Fine by me... by myyrk · · Score: 2, Informative

      DST was conceived by Benjamin Franklin in 1784.

    25. Re:Fine by me... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      I'd prefer it was permanent as well. It's depressing getting out of work when it's pitch black.

    26. Re:Fine by me... by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Absolutely! Amazingly enough, this is probably the first piece of legislation in the history of the world which, while typically failing to do what they claimed it would do, had a positive affect: it increased the quality of life for those it impacted! I've personally been overjoyed to have an extra hour of daylight, allowing me to go out and do things in the evening which I'd not normally be able to do during the evening, instead having to wait for the weekend - ie, going to the park with my son, going for a bike ride, or going shooting. I'm not really using more energy (I'm outdoors most of the time), and I don't have to confine my leasure activity to the weekend!

      Really, I couldn't be more pleased.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    27. Re:Fine by me... by paradoja · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not sure he did so: William Willet

    28. Re:Fine by me... by myyrk · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the pointer.

    29. Re:Fine by me... by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      If 43% have flextime, that means that 57% do NOT! And unless my math is worse than I think, 57 > 43. And I doubt that it's changed much in the last 3 years.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    30. Re:Fine by me... by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Having flextime is not the same as being able to pick your hours. It means you work with your boss and your co-workers to figure out which hours you work.

      My boss is not picky about when I come and go, so I guess I have flextime. But I need to be onsite for meetings. And my hours need to overlap significantly with those of various folk I work with.

      Plus there are external factors. Unlike many people, I don't have a family, so I'm not constrained by daycare/school hours, needing to time things in coordination with my spouse, etc. But I do like to avoid rush hour.

      Bottom line: "I think I'll move my workday forward an hour in order to enjoy the long summer afternoon" is not an option for most workers. Not even most flextime workers.

    31. Re:Fine by me... by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Vitamin supplements are safe and quite often ineffective.

    32. Re:Fine by me... by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      If all you do is shift your workday by an hour in either direction, you're going to have enough overlap almost every day. Heck, if your "gettin' up earlier" plan is a good one, you can probably convince your boss and some of your coworkers to be on the same time.

      Unless you happen to have 9:00 meetings every day, followed by meetings throughout the day, followed by a meeting that ends at 5:00 (insert appropriate starting and ending times for your situation)

      But if you spend that much time in meetings, You could probably be replaced by an hibiscus with no loss of functionality.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  7. same old story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some group of advisors profess their absolute expertise on something, the goverment makes the change and hey, what do you know it didnt change a thing....

  8. bummer. by hypethetica · · Score: 1

    I actually liked the experiment of this. For my house in particular, there was no energy savings because I'd already switched most of my lights out for CFLs. (most of the savings was supposed to come from lighting) Perhaps there were no savings because everyone else has switched to CFLs too? tee hee.

    1. Re:bummer. by Hatta · · Score: 1

      I actually liked the experiment of this. For my house in particular, there was no energy savings because I'd already switched most of my lights out for CFLs. (most of the savings was supposed to come from lighting) Perhaps there were no savings because everyone else has switched to CFLs too? tee hee.

      Did you factor in the social costs of spectrum induced insanity? The glare... the GLARE! why won't it stop?!?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    2. Re:bummer. by TrappedByMyself · · Score: 1

      there was no energy savings because I'd already switched most of my lights out for CFLs

      CFLs still use energy...

      --

      Help me take back Slashdot. When did 'News for Nerds' become 'FUD and Conspiracy Theories for Extremist Nutjobs'?
  9. alternatively... by boarder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... we can just get rid of DST altogether, since it has been shown to not do dick except annoy people and cost companies money in IT time.

    Keep it summer time year round if you ask me.

    --
    IANAL, but I play one on /.
    1. Re:alternatively... by marcog123 · · Score: 1

      Come to South Africa...no daylight saving nonsense at all!

    2. Re:alternatively... by Darlantan · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Damn straight. DST is one of the dumbest things I've ever encountered. It's shocking how many people think that there's an hour of extra light automagically generated by a time change.

      Personally, I'm setting all my clocks to GMT.

      --
      Fill in your four or five-letter word of wisdom here _ _ _ _ _.
    3. Re:alternatively... by mandelbr0t · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should live somewhere where there is less than 6 hours of daylight during the shortest day of the year and see if you still have the same view. And don't forget that the sun won't set until after midnight during the summer. Hopefully you don't have to work too early the next day.

      --
      "Please describe the scientific nature of the 'whammy'" - Agent Scully
    4. Re:alternatively... by Lehk228 · · Score: 0

      perhapse people could... i don't know.... work on a summer schedule. moving opening/closing times and work hours makes more sense than changing the clocks

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    5. Re:alternatively... by Moridineas · · Score: 1

      I don't really understand--all the posts that are in a similar vein with yours--that is, "wtf is the point of DST, there's the same amount of daylight!"

      Well of COURSE there's the same amount of daylight, does anyone think differently? The difference is for those people--ie, most of us--who have fixed schedules like 8-5, can experience more of the daylight in the afternoon/evening, as opposed to in the mornings when people are typically asleep.

      What I don't understand is, are you missing this point--I mean, is that not something you realized? Or is it just that you don't care about the evening light?

      I think DST makes perfect sense..

    6. Re:alternatively... by amigabill · · Score: 1

      we can just get rid of DST altogether

      Getting rid of DST altogether would leave us on winter time. I'd rather get rid of "real time" altogether and forever stay on DST. But I'm not awake early in the morning so I'd rather have my daylight in the afternoon, and I don't have kids to care about at the bus stop.

      What exactly was the reasoning at the time they invented this DST shift anyway? I always thought it was for the farmers to have more light for chores before kids went to school in the morning, but everyone seems to have a different reason for it around here.

    7. Re:alternatively... by Moridineas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh, one other thing I was going to ask...

      If you don't approve of DST, do you also not approve of time zones? Both are an attempt to "standardize" day/night conditions to the hours of the day. Some countries--huge ones like China--don't have timezones, so it's obviously possible.

      Are you advocating that the US gets rid of timezones too? As you say, it WOULD be easier (for programmers primarily!) to standardize on GMT/UTC.

    8. Re:alternatively... by Trifthen · · Score: 1

      See, this is exactly the argument people seem to miss in the whole DST debacle. Instead of "redefining time," why not just adjust working hours? So it's generally accepted most companies work 9 to 5. Why not 8 to 4? Same effect, and the definition of "noon" still works with sundials. We still get the warm fuzzies of driving home while the sun's out, without the nonsensical clock adjusting twice every year.

      Summer Time year round, seconded!

      --
      Read: Rabbit Rue - Free serial nove
    9. Re:alternatively... by AK+Marc · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I do live somewhere where there is less than 6 hours of daylight on the shortest day of the year, and daylight savings time has no effect. Why? Because it isn't in effect in the winter. As for the summer, what does having the sun set at 11 p.m. or 12 a.m. really effect? You either learn to deal with 24 hour light (yes, even in the middle of the short nights, there is still twilight), or you move. An hour here or there makes no difference in 24 hour light. So, what was your point about those of us that live near the Arctic (or Antatctic) Circle?

    10. Re:alternatively... by Arcane_Rhino · · Score: 1
      Yep. Where I live there is ~24 hours of daylight a summer solstice and ~3 hours of daylight at winter solstice.

      Either is fine, but the switching just pisses me off.

      Wish I had mod points for you.

    11. Re:alternatively... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If they start shifting the time zone boundries around for arbitrary reasons seasonally then I'll have an issue with timezones.

      Timezones, unlike DST, actually served and still serves a purpose. Instead of a continuous change in local time the change is broken up into discrete chunks. Sorta handy for things like not having trains end up smashing into each other because each had their own version of "noon".

    12. Re:alternatively... by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

      See, this is exactly the argument people seem to miss in the whole DST debacle. Instead of "redefining time," why not just adjust working hours? So it's generally accepted most companies work 9 to 5. Why not 8 to 4?

      This is a GREAT question. The answer as I understand it is that (in the USA at least) the government can't mandate the hours of operation for companies. However, the government CAN effect such a change by encouraging states to set their clocks differently.

    13. Re:alternatively... by mandelbr0t · · Score: 0

      Well, I guess you aren't as attuned to daylight as I am. The difference between sunset @ 3:30pm and 4:30pm is significant, as it means I am coming home at dusk rather than nighttime. Also, the extra hour of sleep during the summer is important too. It's darned hard to sleep when it's still bright outside.

      --
      "Please describe the scientific nature of the 'whammy'" - Agent Scully
    14. Re:alternatively... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...I think DST makes perfect sense..
      Most everyone likes DST. It's standard time that sucks. As the original poster said, just get rid of the time change and keep summer [DST] time.

      In order to argue for the maintenance of this out-dated practice, you need to justify both switches. Just an idea of what you're up against:

      - The DST changes cost a not-insignificant amount of money, both in decreased productivity and absence of workers as well as the publicity needed to remind people to reset their clocks.
      - The DST changes cost lives due to higher incidences of auto accidents around the change overs periods.
      - It no longer saves energy [new, the discussion topic]
      - It generally annoys the hell out people

      For what it's worth, I agree with the OP...just keep DST year round. Who cares whether people have to go to work when it's still dark outside?
    15. Re:alternatively... by prockcore · · Score: 0, Troll

      The difference is for those people--ie, most of us--who have fixed schedules like 8-5, can experience more of the daylight in the afternoon/evening


      That already happens.. it's called summer. The only thing DST accomplishes is instead of having the sun go down at 8pm during the summer, you want it to go down at 9pm. Because 3 hours of after-work daylight isn't enough... sheesh.
    16. Re:alternatively... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mmmmm... Try sunrise at 9am, then perhaps you will not be so excited about DST year round.

    17. Re:alternatively... by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      You realize that you can just go to bed earlier and get out of bed earlier, no need to BS us.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    18. Re:alternatively... by prockcore · · Score: 2, Informative

      Maybe you should live somewhere where there is less than 6 hours of daylight during the shortest day of the year and see if you still have the same view.


      The shortest day of the year happens on STANDARD TIME.. DST has no affect on the shortest day of the year!
    19. Re:alternatively... by prockcore · · Score: 1

      So it's generally accepted most companies work 9 to 5. Why not 8 to 4?


      That'll happen when you get rid of DST. In Arizona, where we try to minimize the amount of sun we get after work, work hours have been pushing 10-6.
    20. Re:alternatively... by ValuJet · · Score: 1

      Because 3 hours of after-work daylight isn't enough... sheesh.


      Or alternatively, the sun rising at 5am is one hour too late for the terminally lazy who are unable to change their clocks.

      Time is just a standard measurement that is agreed upon by all people because it makes life easier. Having noon be the hour when the sun is at the zenith no longer has any real value as we all have a standard time to reference. By changing the common reference, we are maximizing the time the sun is out for most people.

      Yes, we could change the time of absolutely everything so you didn't have to worry about the inconvenience of daylight saving time, but it is one helluva lot easier to ask you to change your clocks twice a year.
    21. Re:alternatively... by AK+Marc · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is never a time when that is the case. Sunset was at 5-5:30 when DST went into effect. Sunset will get later and later, but never was sunset 3:30 before DST. What you want is all clocks ahead an hour or two all year long. That arguement may be valid, but is irrelevant to setting clocks ahead about the time there is 12 hours of sun-up world-wide. It would be nice to change the clocks to have the sun come up at 5 p.m. in the winter when there will be only a few hours of sunlight. You would go to bed at sunset at a reasonable hour. But again, what happens on days where the sun sets at 3:30 is irrelevant to the issue of DST.

    22. Re:alternatively... by maxume · · Score: 1

      With DST, congress argues with his boss for him...

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    23. Re:alternatively... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Abolishing 9-5 would have a significant environmental impact. Think how long the average American nine-'til-fiver spends stuck in traffic because everyone is travelling to work at the same time. If people started work at 8-10 and worked until 4-6, then the rush would be spread out over two hours, reducing congestion and thus emissions.

      Do something for the environment today; put as many of your workers as possible on flexitime. You're also likely to end up with a happier workforce, if they spend less time getting to and from work every morning.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    24. Re:alternatively... by jbenwell · · Score: 1

      By my count, we have DST from March-November (around 8 months) and standard time from November-March (about 4 months). A better question might be --- why do we ever go off DST when it's the norm?

    25. Re:alternatively... by markdavis · · Score: 1

      I couldn't agree more. Keep it on summer time all the time. STOP THE INSANITY. It is a waste of time and resources and is terribly difficult to people with sleep disorders. Gain more USABLE sunlight all year round- later in the day- when 80+% of people can use it to their personal productivity after work.

    26. Re:alternatively... by CheeseTroll · · Score: 1

      I say we go all the way and standardize on Stardates.

      --
      A post a day keeps productivity at bay.
    27. Re:alternatively... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      doesn't the sunset time get shorter in the winter the farther north you go?
      why yes, yes it does. So in fact I am pretty sure it was sunset at 3:30 in some places.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    28. Re:alternatively... by tkw954 · · Score: 1

      Come to Saskatchewan, we're on daylight saving time all year round: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daylight_saving

    29. Re:alternatively... by Copid · · Score: 1

      If they start shifting the time zone boundries around for arbitrary reasons seasonally then I'll have an issue with timezones.
      Another great thing about DST is that time zones do shift around for arbitrary reasons as a result of it. Like, for example, when some unnamed country's dumbass legislature decides to change when DST starts and ends while other countries don't. This gives us the added bonus of the fact that time zones not only shift arbitrarily, but the shifts aren't even necessarily correlated with longitude! Hooray!
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    30. Re:alternatively... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      There is no place in the USA where sunset was at 3:30 when switching to DST. I am pretty sure you are completely wrong. Oh, and as for "the farther north you go" goes, the AK in AK Marc stands for Alaska. Are you further north than me?

    31. Re:alternatively... by theeddie55 · · Score: 1

      Keep it summer time year round if you ask me. Britain tried this in 1968, there's a reason it only lasted 3 years.
    32. Re:alternatively... by totally+bogus+dude · · Score: 1

      Duh, the parent was responding to a post that suggested using "DST" ALL YEAR ROUND.: "Keep it summer time year round if you ask me." That means every day of the year would be on what is now called summer time.

      Never mind. Whoever modded you informative obviously didn't bother to read and/or understand what was being said either, so you're not alone.

    33. Re:alternatively... by totally+bogus+dude · · Score: 1

      First, the post you responded to was actually suggesting getting rid of "summer time" in the sense of making it "summer time" all-year-round: "Keep it summer time year round if you ask me.".

      Secondly:

      always thought it was for the farmers to have more light for chores before kids went to school in the morning

      DST moves the clock forward by one hour. This has the effect of making sunrise one hour LATER than it would otherwise have been (so instead of sunrise when the clock says 6am, it happens when the clock says 7am). DST is about making it stay light for longer (in the evening), for after-work activities. I think most rural folk dislike DST because they need to get up early for various farm-related things (something to do with milking cows or somesuch), and go to bed early so they can get up early. Daylight savings means it stays later longer, which can make it harder to sleep.

    34. Re:alternatively... by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      That doesn't work too well with transit schedules. Too many changes are hard. If you can't remember to set your clocks, then how could you remember the new summer schedules, and the new summer business schedules?

    35. Re:alternatively... by MoogMan · · Score: 1

      There's no real point in timezones. Everyone should use UTC. After the shock of having to go in at "10pm", you'll get used to it. Or Internet Time

    36. Re:alternatively... by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      Timezones ARE somewhat arbitrary. Last Christmas, I spent it with my aunt's family, and though we are in the same timezone, it got dark 1/2 hour earlier than I was used to.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    37. Re:alternatively... by Darlantan · · Score: 1

      Honestly? No, I really don't. Then again, I don't mind the idea of waking up at the crack of dawn to a clock that reads 2200, either. Why? Because it's going to read within a minute or so of the same time when the sun rises the next day. I'm also not a fan of AM/PM.

      24 hour time, one world time zone, and none of this DST crap. Now that people are routinely interacting with areas far outside their local time zone, I really don't see the point of keeping what more often than not simply complicates matters further.

      --
      Fill in your four or five-letter word of wisdom here _ _ _ _ _.
    38. Re:alternatively... by Darlantan · · Score: 1

      Having lived in a place that changed time zones no less than three times while I lived there, I'd like to call BS on that.

      You look at one option: local time only. Go global. One time for the entire world. Yeah, sun wouldn't be overhead at noon for the vast majority of the world, but who cares? I can't think of any jobs that require that the local time be linked to the sun's position.

      --
      Fill in your four or five-letter word of wisdom here _ _ _ _ _.
  10. Yeah, about that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The attempt by the US Congress to make it look like they were doing something about the energy crisis has been exposed as the waste it is"

    If...if...only we'd listened to you kdawson, if only we'd listened!

    1. Re:Yeah, about that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      D'oh!

      Replace kdawson with Brett.

  11. Not surprising by Endo13 · · Score: 1

    Any "daylight saving" time is a waste of time and energy. It may have been a good idea back in Ben Franklin's day when people used candles and oil lamps, but now people leave the lights and electronics on whether it's day or night.

    Personally, I'd MUCH prefer to just leave it on real time and forget this nonsense altogether. Can you imagine, never having to change your clock except when you move? But I guess that makes too much sense.

    --
    There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    1. Re:Not surprising by qwijibo · · Score: 1

      We should take it one step further and use UTC for everything. That would make it easier to figure out when international conference calls are happening and you wouldn't have to change your watch when you move.

    2. Re:Not surprising by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I've thought of that before. I'd like that even better. But I'll just settle for sticking with the same time year-round.

      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    3. Re:Not surprising by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Yeah, around here, the office lights are on all day anyway. I'd bet the majority of lighting energy use are in office buildings, not in private homes, for exactly this reason. So the new DST does fuck-all for that.

      But what about at home? Well for me the difference is between getting home at dusk, or after dark. So I either turn the lights on immediately, or turn them on twenty minutes after I get home. The only lights I leave on if I'm not in the room are the living room lights, so we're talking one or two light bulbs for 20 minutes.

      In some homes you could imagine it making a difference of several lightbulbs for as much as an hour, but that's still a small amount of energy in a house that is using the majority of its electricity in the form of heating/AC and running the refrigerator.

      The whole thing was just busy-work for Congress, and frankly I think they have a lot more to get busy with. The fact that its major result is just to annoy IT people just puts the cherry on top of this Fuck-Up Sunday.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    4. Re:Not surprising by mysticgoat · · Score: 1

      It may have been a good idea back in Ben Franklin's day when people used candles and oil lamps, but now people leave the lights and electronics on whether it's day or night.

      Too true!

      Which is why I would personally prefer that we change the global economy to predominantly graveyard shifts so I can get more quality time in the sun.

    5. Re:Not surprising by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "one or two light bulbs for 20 minutes"

      times every household.
      suddenly it's a a lot of energy.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    6. Re:Not surprising by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Compared to a refrigerator, heater/AC unit, all running 24/7, times every household.

      No, it isn't a lot of energy.

      As demonstrated by these results.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    7. Re:Not surprising by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      You'd still have to keep track of when international communications are feasible. At 01:00 GMT, I'm eating dinner & watching TV, but my British friend is fast asleep.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  12. Re:Don't foget about October.... (for the children by GryMor · · Score: 1

    If they aren't going to abolish DST all together, it better bloody well stay, I don't want to do a panic dance to deploy yet another set of (more complicated), Time Zone rules, and still get screwed by embeded devices and propriatery systems that just can't handle it.

    --
    Realities just a bunch of bits.
  13. This is significant... why? by superbus1929 · · Score: 1

    The ONLY people that care about DST from a work standpoint are us IT people, because of all the shit we had to go to re-patch our systems. Other than that, this is insignificant. Moving DST was insignificant in itself; I call it "Freedom Fries Legislation"

    --
    Let's stop dilly-dallying and just change "-1: Overrated" to "-1: Disagree" or "-1: Doesn't Subscribe to Groupthink".
  14. keep "new" DST, abolish Congress? by swschrad · · Score: 1

    oh, wait, that's been tried before. didn't work then, either.

    --
    if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
  15. Who cares about energy savings by MarcoAtWork · · Score: 1

    three more weeks with enough sunlight after work to actually do something (run, bike, ...) is all that matters... heck, if they made DST 2 hours long and all year round it'd be awesome, rather than being dark at 4:30 in the winter at least it'd stay bright until 6:30, who cares if the sun comes up at 8am or 10am, daylight after work is a lot more important...

    --
    -- the cake is a lie
    1. Re:Who cares about energy savings by sh00z · · Score: 2, Insightful

      or, alternatively: three more weeks with LESS sunlight BEFORE work actually do something (run, bike, ...) is all that matters. And I've been robbed. Who cares if it's sunny after work? Daylight when I wake up is a lot more important.

    2. Re:Who cares about energy savings by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Problem is if you just left it on DST time.... Eventually everybodies schedules would shift from 8-5 to 9-6 or whatever.. You can only trick people for so long.. Sure we should just abolish DST and change work hours to 7-4.. But people don't grasp concepts like that well.

    3. Re:Who cares about energy savings by dazedNconfuzed · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Fine. You like more light. GET UP EARLIER. And leave my clock alone.

      I _really_ dislike getting up before dawn. I mean deep viceral psychological bio-cycle "why am I getting up at night" kind of dislike. Just when dawn was arriving at a decent time, you "I want more light so I'll force everyone else to change their schedules" people make me get up at 5:00AM EST instead of 6AM (and now you're talking about pushing it back to 4:00AM?!?).

      The clock reflects astronomical realities of earth/sun positioning. Noon is supposed to mean the sun is overhead, mid-day. Cocky people then decide they don't like that arrangement, and declare what _is_ shall be different from what they _want_ reality to be. A rose by any other name may smell as sweet, and calling dung a "rose" doesn't make it smell any better. Calling 5:00AM "6:00AM Daylight Saving Time" doesn't change the fact that it's really 5:00AM, and the combination of light and circadian rhythms means it's still time to sleep.

      It's almost enough to make me move to Arizona where they ignore this nonsense.

      Seriously, man - it really messes up my internal clock. Midnight to six is my time to _sleep_; mess with that, and you're messing with my ability to function.

      You want more light? YOU get up earlier. Leave my clock alone; I'll be a lot more productive that way.

      --
      Can we get a "-1 Wrong" moderation option?
    4. Re:Who cares about energy savings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just wait till you get skin cancer from all that extra sunlight. Then we'll see if you're still crowing about how great DST is.

      Also, if daylight is that bloody important to you, get a job with hours that supports your sunlight habbit. Don't make the rest of us pay for making your fix easier to get.

    5. Re:Who cares about energy savings by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      Where I work, I have control over when I get in to an extent, but once I'm there I basically can't leave until it seems late enough to satisfy the perception of a "startup mentality". So essentially I get to stay at work until at least a few hours after the sun goes down.

      Let it get dark at 4:30. I'm good with that. Sunlight in the morning is better.

    6. Re:Who cares about energy savings by thestudio_bob · · Score: 5, Funny

      Wow, sounds like someone woke up on the wrong side of the day light saving time today.

      --
      The real Sig captains the Northwestern. This one captains /.
    7. Re:Who cares about energy savings by vimh42 · · Score: 1

      You want more light? YOU get up earlier. Leave my clock alone; I'll be a lot more productive that way.

      That's the closest thing to gospel I've heard in a long time. Amen brother! Now pardon me while I go back to sleep.

    8. Re:Who cares about energy savings by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      You do realize that the concepts of personal responsibility and self determination is completely beyond Congress and POTUS?

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    9. Re:Who cares about energy savings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good god man, go take a nap.

    10. Re:Who cares about energy savings by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

      I didn't bother reading any replies below this parent's post yet.

      Agreed, more or less, but I would be okay with solar noon coming at 1pm all year round (more or less around 1pm).

      Schools, businesses, etc. can just offset their schedules if they don't like the current clock hours. One idea should be letting kids sleep in, and not require them to be at school until 4 hours before solar noon. So when noon comes at 1pm, school would start at 9am and go until 3:30pm.

    11. Re:Who cares about energy savings by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      As an AZ resident I must say I feel sorry for you, but it is really not much better dealing with all the wackos with DST from here. Sometimes were on CA time sometimes were on NV time. I'd be happy if we could just all be on GMT. Sure would be nice to call a meeting at 17:00 on a specific date and know that everyone around the world will know when that is.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    12. Re:Who cares about energy savings by Guppy06 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Fine. You like more light. GET UP EARLIER. And leave my clock alone."

      No, you should get up later instead.

      "The clock reflects astronomical realities of earth/sun positioning."

      Nope, it reflects oscillations of a cesium atom. Far more regular and periodic than, say, the time between two consecutive noons.

      "Noon is supposed to mean the sun is overhead, mid-day."

      If I recall, there are only four days a year when local solar noon and local mean noon are the same thing, and neither have anything to do with standard time, unless you're standing on a meridian that's a multiple of 15.

      "Cocky people then decide they don't like that arrangement, and declare what _is_ shall be different from what they _want_ reality to be."

      If we're getting paid by the hour, we want our hours to be of a consistent length.

      "doesn't change the fact that it's really 5:00AM,"

      Is that standard time, local solar time or local mean time?

      "Seriously, man - it really messes up my internal clock. Midnight to six is my time to _sleep_; mess with that, and you're messing with my ability to function."

      Then maybe it's time for you to find a job that lets you sleep later.

      "You want more light? YOU get up earlier. Leave my clock alone; I'll be a lot more productive that way."

      No thanks, I prefer coming home before sunset.

    13. Re:Who cares about energy savings by metlin · · Score: 0

      And just why?

      Your waking hours are a function of when you go to sleep, the earlier you fall asleep the earlier you wake up.

      It's a good habit for kids to go sleep early and wake up early.

      Now, admittedly, when I was in grad school there were times when I would work nights and waking up in the mornings was a bitch.

      But after a little getting used to, I switched back to waking up early again. Besides, it helps to function during the hours of the rest of the world (well, unless you have a job that requires you to be up late).

      Nothing better than waking up early, going for a run and working out, having a good breakfast and heading to work early. This way, you can leave early and have time for other things.

    14. Re:Who cares about energy savings by Peter+Mork · · Score: 1

      "You want more light? YOU get up earlier. Leave my clock alone; I'll be a lot more productive that way."

      No thanks, I prefer coming home before sunset.

      That's exactly GP's point. If you want to get home before sunset, then you should get up an hour earlier and head home from work an hour earlier. If your boss doesn't like this, then take it up with her. Leave the rest of us out of the equation. Lying about what time it is benefits nobody.

    15. Re:Who cares about energy savings by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Since most business run the same hours, it's not really a solution.

      Most business aren't IT.

      I like the fact business AC runs less this way.

      Funny thing is, you can't get true number until it has run this way for at least a year.

      Not that it matters to me, I work 4 tens.

      Now, the persons that your repling to
      s point was that ANY setting will be inconvientant to somebody.
      The original poster is just whining that it needs to be convient to him.

      He states he sleeps best 12Am-6AM, there is stuill a 12AM and a 6AM so he looses no sleep. Unless he ment some arbitray 12 AM based on nothing. In which case he can sleep from 1AM to 7AM.
      Further, his illogic is compounded by the fact that it will be MORE convient to him as we leave summer.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    16. Re:Who cares about energy savings by optimus2861 · · Score: 1

      Midnight to six is my time to _sleep_; mess with that, and you're messing with my ability to function.

      Best rejoinder I heard to a very similar whine the last time DST got "discussed" on Slashdot:

      If messing with your clock by one lousy hour a measly two days a year has such a profound effect on your sleeping and ability to function, you'd better never have children.

    17. Re:Who cares about energy savings by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1

      "The clock reflects astronomical realities of earth/sun positioning."

      Nope, it reflects oscillations of a cesium atom. Far more regular and periodic than, say, the time between two consecutive noons.

      This is nonsense. We break our time into units directly related to the resonance frequency of the cesium atom because it's convenient and more accurate than based on astronomy. This has nothing to do with the method that we use for expressing and using time, which is based on the rotation of the earth.

      As for the idiocy of changing clocks to match your preferred schedule -- yes, you should be getting up and scheduling your day so that you are able to "use" the daylight in the way you wish. As should the grandparent poster who is complaining about having to get up early due to daylight savings.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    18. Re:Who cares about energy savings by goldarg · · Score: 1

      Just because we dont change our clocks in Arizona does not mean we are not affected.

      Dealing with the rest of the US or even the rest of the world we have to adjust to everyone moving time-zones twice a year.

      This leads to confusion at work if our corporate headquarters is 2 or 3 hours ahead or even if the people in Denver are at the same time as us or an hour ahead.

      Its like twice a year the entire state moves.

    19. Re:Who cares about energy savings by ryanov · · Score: 1

      I know more than one teacher, and one recently said to me that right around the DST changes, the kids are "bonkers" for the entire week.

      Maybe THAT'S what you meant by the post about not having kids?

    20. Re:Who cares about energy savings by Guppy06 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "yes, you should be getting up and scheduling your day so that you are able to "use" the daylight in the way you wish."

      Well, in order to do that, I'd have to get everybody I do business with to alter their schedules as well, and they'd have to do the same with everybody they do business with, and everybody they do business with, and everybody they do business with and... gee, maybe we should have an agreed-upon standard for this whole "adjust our schedule to follow daylight hours" thing. We could call it... Daylight Saving Time!

      OP is bitching about being in the slim minority that doesn't want to change. It's his right to bitch, but he's going to have to do some serious legwork to convince everybody between him and Kevin Bacon to abandon it.

    21. Re:Who cares about energy savings by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      "The clock reflects astronomical realities of earth/sun positioning."
      Nope, it reflects oscillations of a cesium atom. Far more regular and periodic than, say, the time between two consecutive noons.
      Then why do they adjust the cesium-based clock to match the vagaries of the earth's rotation and orbit (i.e. the distance between two consecutive noons) every few months?

      (Yes, I know they don't adjust the basic SI unit. They do, however, adjust the odd minute - and, consequently, hours, weeks, months, and years.)

      If we're getting paid by the hour, we want our hours to be of a consistent length.
      But they are, give or take the odd leap-second mentioned above. Oh yeah, and the one time every year when a whole friggin' hour disappears, only to re-appear several months later!

      But, regardless of which side of the DST argument you're on, why is it the only the pro-DST brigade who - after deliberately putting themselves out of step with observed reality - insist that everyone else is wrong and should follow them?

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    22. Re:Who cares about energy savings by SamSim · · Score: 1

      Noon is supposed to mean the sun is overhead, mid-day.
      If I recall, there are only four days a year when local solar noon and local mean noon are the same thing, and neither have anything to do with standard time, unless you're standing on a meridian that's a multiple of 15.

      Yeah, they're, like, up to 0.9 of a whole second different.

    23. Re:Who cares about energy savings by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "Then why do they adjust the cesium-based clock to match the vagaries of the earth's rotation and orbit (i.e. the distance between two consecutive noons) every few months?"

      To shift the hours of daylight to where they're more convenient. And we don't shift the clocks to adjust for the equation of time.

      "But they are, give or take the odd leap-second mentioned above. Oh yeah, and the one time every year when a whole friggin' hour disappears, only to re-appear several months later!"

      That doesn't effect the length of those hours. If you insist on rigorously following the sun, an "eight hour day" is longer on some days than others.

      "why is it the only the pro-DST brigade who - after deliberately putting themselves out of step with observed reality"

      My point was, in spite of the original poster's insistence, nobody is "in step with observed reality." With or without Daylight Saving Time, the sun is directly overhead at noon, at best, four times a year.

      "insist that everyone else is wrong and should follow them?"

      Exactly the stance taken by the original poster, only against DST. Either way, either "everybody does it" or standard time itself breaks down. That being the case, in a world where the vast majority enjoy having more sunlight in the afternoon than the morning, why should they bow to the will of the minority?

    24. Re:Who cares about energy savings by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "Yeah, they're, like, up to 0.9 of a whole second different."

      Try fifteen minutes, or half an hour between maximums. Something to consider if you're truly committed to following the sun.

    25. Re:Who cares about energy savings by Rakarra · · Score: 1
      That's exactly GP's point. If you want to get home before sunset, then you should get up an hour earlier and head home from work an hour earlier.

      At least in the US, that's just not how most businesses run. Unless you're in IT or some other rare "liberated" sector of the workforce, your hours are specifically set and there is something magical and sacred there about the work hours of 9-5 (or 8-5 if you like lunch breaks in most sectors). It's far easier to actually change the definition of the time of day that "5 pm" corresponds to than it is to change business hours, which Congress has little theoretical authority to mandate anyway (though I'm sure they could with the popular 'commerce clause' justification).

    26. Re:Who cares about energy savings by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      It's Slashdot, I'm sure he's well ahead of you.

    27. Re:Who cares about energy savings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fucking dumbass. CA and NV are on the same time.

  16. Never mind lost productivity... by CrazyTalk · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just two quick examples of the COST of the change, due to lost productivity - I live in the Eastern US, and someone in Ireland missed a conference call with us because everyone on both sides of the Atlantic thought that Ireland was always 5 hours ahead (for some reason, people found it impossible to fathom that this wasnt the case if we changes our clock and they didn't, but whatever). Example number two - a contractor in brazil was going to take down our servers at 5:00 EDST but actually took them down at 4:00 since they didnt know about the time change.

    1. Re:Never mind lost productivity... by krlynch · · Score: 2, Informative
      I live in the Eastern US, and someone in Ireland missed a conference call with us because everyone on both sides of the Atlantic thought that Ireland was always 5 hours ahead

      Even before this change, there was a difference in the start dates of Daylight Saving and Summer Time across the Atlantic; for the last decade, it was a one week difference at the start. Before then, all hell broke loose across Europe, as different countries started and ended at different times. Most of the world outside Europe and North America doesn't bother with EVER changing their clocks, but those in the Southern Hemisphere that DO observe Daylight Saving do so roughly 180 days out of phase with the Northern Hemisphere. The time deltas between two points on the globe can differ by many hours (up to three!) throughout the year due to DST changes. Dealing with an international scientific collaboration as I do sensitizes you to the insanity of DST rather rapidly :-)

    2. Re:Never mind lost productivity... by curunir · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Brazil example is a good illustration of what makes the DST change so annoying.

      I live in California, so I'm on pacific time. Brazil's major cities are, IIRC, two time zones ahead of eastern time. So if I know the time in California, how do I figure out the time in Brazil? Well, I have to know what day of the year it is. It's 5 time zones ahead of me, but it can either 5 hours ahead during the times of the year when the US has switched its time and Brazil hasn't yet switched theirs. Or it can be 4 (US summer) or 6 (Brazilian summer) if both have switched.

      If we got rid of this nonsense, Brazil would be 5 hours ahead. Period.

      --
      "Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos!"
    3. Re:Never mind lost productivity... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even before this last change there was a week discrepancy between North American and Europe at DST time changing time...

    4. Re:Never mind lost productivity... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      If I were in charge of such a project, the first thing I'd do is buy everybody a two time zone watch and say "Absolutely all schedules will be communicated in Zulu time."

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    5. Re:Never mind lost productivity... by RobertLTux · · Score: 2, Informative

      easyish solution next time send a link to the timeanddate.com world clock with your cities coded in

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    6. Re:Never mind lost productivity... by Frozen+Void · · Score: 1

      Yeah,DST is breach of standards.All companies can just switch to GMT and organize the schedule after it.
      No regional time change to.

  17. I wish they change this stuff more often by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    $200/hr * 20 * 8 clients = enough cha ching to enjoy this crap.

    1. Re:I wish they change this stuff more often by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have clocks that use to know about DST. Now they don't. So I'm stuck with changing the time 4 times a year till they break or scrapping clocks, VCR, and a MircoWave oven and buying replacements. Everyone I know has several devices where DST is hard coded and there is no way to change and in the same boat. This is great success, the economy should increase with all the new purchases.

  18. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  19. There were DST in Iraq? by athloi · · Score: 0

    And they didn't save any energy? I sure am glad we invaded then, to punish that awful Hussein guy for having DSTs, supporting terrorism, and offending fashion senses worldwide.

  20. Amen by porcupine8 · · Score: 1

    I'm always counting the days til DST comes back. Later daylight makes me happy! Sure, some schoolkids have to wait for the bus in the dark - but I had to do that anyhow when I was younger, even when it wasn't DST! I wish we could have it this way all year long - winter is when we need it *worst*, with the sun setting by 4:30 in many places.

    --
    Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    1. Re:Amen by nebaz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      some schoolkids have to wait for the bus in the dark

      I never understood school schedules. It has been shown that teenagers naturally wake up later in the day, and that elementary school students wake up earlier. Yet it is the elementary schools that start at 8:30 and the high schools that start at 7:30. Why not make school like work, where it runs 9-5, on a schedule more matching that of the parents? Some will counter that high school students have jobs in the evening, so let them start earlier. Why should jobs drive school schedules?

      --
      Rhymes that keep their secrets will unfold behind the clouds.There upon the rainbow is the answer to a neverending story
    2. Re:Amen by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      The problem is, not only does DST not give you more daylight hours, it also doesn't give you more later daylight hours. It only changes what time is shown on the clock when daylight begins and ends. People just assume that the day would start and end at the same time by the clock, regardless of the daylight. In fact, it's probably a lot more accurate to assume that DST is the REASON your day goes as late as it does. If we didn't have DST, you would start work an hour earlier (according to the clock) and end work an hour earlier, and thus you would still have the same amount of daylight hours after work. The reason for this is that working hours in general are driven by the industries that can only work in daylight, such as farming, construction, etc.

      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    3. Re:Amen by porcupine8 · · Score: 1
      So you're saying that if we went to full-time non-DST, the "normal working day" would magically shift from 9-5 to 8-4? I doubt it. Working hours for most of the population no longer have anything to do with daylight, only with what's been long established as "the norm" and is unlikely to change soon. Yes, it may have once upon a time been based on daylight, but then it got set in stone somewhere along the line.

      Given that my work schedule doesn't change when DST starts, and wouldn't change if DST or standard time were made year-round, yes, it does give me more post-work daylight.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    4. Re:Amen by 2short · · Score: 1


      Right. Without DST, we could all independently choose to move our schedules earlier acording to the clock. And every buisiness could pick their own day to change their hours, etc. The net effect would be just like DST, except far more confusing and haphazard. Why would that be good?

      From what I can tell, workers in businesses that depend on daylight, such as construction, are the only ones who regularly get up before sunrise, so as to be on the jobsite as early as possible. They keep earlier, and frequently longer, hours than the rest of us. My conclusion is that working hours for the rest of us are driven by most people not haveing to get up before sunrise most of the time. Which naturally sets societys hours to something that makes sense in the winter, but is later than optimal in the summer. Hence DST.

    5. Re:Amen by Chosen+Reject · · Score: 1

      I agree. I have actually decided that when we go off DST this year I am not. I'll just end up at work an hour earlier and leave an hour earlier. I certainly will not miss losing an hour of sleep in March. So what if I don't get an extra hour in November. It's just not worth it. I'd rather come in to work when it is pitch black and leave with even 15 minutes of daylight then to come in when it's dark and leave when it's dark.

      Speaking of which, why do people suffer the switch to DST to occur during their sleep. Next time the switch to DST occurs, I encourage everyone to make the switch on Friday at 4:00pm.

      --
      Stop Global Warming!
      Just say no to irreversible processes!
    6. Re:Amen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      High school starts earlier so kids can do their afterschool programs. If school started later, your football team would have an hour less daylight to get their practice in. Go Team!

    7. Re:Amen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "I never understood school schedules."

      Then you haven't thought about it much.

      Early to bed, early to rise. School schedules reflected our agricultural heritage, which is often why summers are off, still.

      "It has been shown that teenagers naturally wake up later in the day, and that elementary school students wake up earlier."

      These are more recent studies, like in the last 10 years or so. Once schedules are set, things are hard to change, as there is a certain expectation.

      "Yet it is the elementary schools that start at 8:30 and the high schools that start at 7:30. Why not make school like work, where it runs 9-5, on a schedule more matching that of the parents?"

      Obviously you haven't worked a hard day in your life. 9-5 is more white collar. Blue collar traditionally was 7-3 for 1st shift. 2nd shift was 3-11pm. For example, where I am, the white collar rush time in the morning is heaviest at about 8:30am. However, most of my neighbors are out the door before 7, and the dump trucks start their banging 10 minutes after 7.

      "Some will counter that high school students have jobs in the evening, so let them start earlier. Why should jobs drive school schedules?"

      Your older student can take care of themselves if they arrive home around 2.5-3pm. The 2nd grader can be met at 3:15-3:30 by the parent that got off work. Or if the elementary school student has an older sibling, watched by them since the latter got home first. Or, without an older sibling, something that used to be done was that you hired a short watch babysitter, usually a high schooler. Most parents are concerned with what happens after school.

      A high schooler can drop off his elementary school sibling, or the white collar see the same off on the way to work. The blue collar with the elementary aged child usually had a stay at home wife, or she worked a more service or white collar job and could see the child off later.

      As well, most elementary school students usually don't have after school activities, like theater, marching band, or sports. This gives high school students who want to do those activities time to do them, and still make it home for the family dinner. If they started later, you wouldn't have a nice family meal, since they, as you were earlier quoting studies, are a good thing according to most studies.

      And yes, jobs do matter. A lot. High school usually lets out by 2:45. This allows high schoolers to hit the 2nd shift if blue collar (3-11), or the 2nd shift if they work in the service industry like fast food (depends, but usually 2.5-3.5pm to closing which is typically 9-10). Doesn't sound like a big deal to you, if mommy and daddy paid for your toys and food, but for a lot of on the edge students, if you can't have an afternoon job, they would drop out. At least this allows those interested in sports to partake, as well as those who need the jobs or the training to also get it while still in high school.

      btw, those sleep studies I don't think accurately accounted for natural light variances, in which case daylight savings actually works against how the teen mind would prefer.

    8. Re:Amen by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that if we went to full-time non-DST, the "normal working day" would magically shift from 9-5 to 8-4? Magically? No. But I think it would happen a lot sooner than most people would expect. We really can't know for sure either way, as DST has been around longer than the "9-5 workday".

      Given that my work schedule doesn't change when DST starts, and wouldn't change if DST or standard time were made year-round, yes, it does give me more post-work daylight. Only if your assumptions are correct. If my assumption is correct, DST in fact gives you LESS post-work daylight hours in the winter rather than more in the summer.

      Regardless, DST in any form is little more than a useless annoyance that adds a lot of unnecessary work, as well as causing missed schedules and appointments.
      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    9. Re:Amen by largesnike · · Score: 1

      It's to teach 'em that life is suffering: tell those little kids to behave themselves and stay in bed, and for those lazy-arse, good-for-nothing teenagers to get out of bed, why when I was a teenager...grumble...grumble...I fought in six world wars...grumble...grumble...died in two of 'em...grumble...grumble

      --
      "Laugh while you can a-monkey boy!" - Dr Emilio Lizardo
    10. Re:Amen by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      Right. Without DST, we could all independently choose to move our schedules earlier acording to the clock. We can and do already. Just because 9-5 is considered the "norm" doesn't mean all businesses everywhere follow it.

      And every buisiness could pick their own day to change their hours, etc. Except there's no need for businesses to change hours, whether there's DST or not. Indiana has only recently gone back to using DST after not having it for decades, and now only to keep time more similar with surrounding states. Most people and businesses don't like it one bit.

      The net effect would be just like DST, except far more confusing and haphazard. Why would that be good? That's just your assumption. Alternatively, the net effect might well be that businesses would move their working hours an hour forward year-round, and done with. It's already daylight by 8:00AM in the winter anyway so the 9-5'ers wouldn't be affected much (if at all), and even with DST the industries that need daylight still need to change their working hours in the winter.

      I'm not saying my assumptions are necessarily correct. But I'm saying it's worth trying, and certainly a lot more worth trying than shifting around the days DST begins and ends.
      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    11. Re:Amen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should jobs drive school schedules?

      Because, being able to wake up at some ungodly early time and spend the first hour of every day groggy, unfocused and unproductive is more important to being able to fit in to the corporate culture than being able to list the characteristics of a Shakespearean sonnet or integrate polynomials by partial fractions. A school's main product isn't knowledge, it's a steady stream of uniform, interchangeable human resources with the proper degree of Calvinist work ethic and no desire to question why their particular job really has to be done between the hours of 8am and 5pm, local time.

    12. Re:Amen by lordSaurontheGreat · · Score: 1

      You are obviously in High School. Therefore, what you say is automatically false. Or, that's how my local board of education officials tell me.

      --
      Consider yourself spoken to.
    13. Re:Amen by porcupine8 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Magically? No. But I think it would happen a lot sooner than most people would expect.

      I think that you vastly underestimate the power of institutional memory. Why do kids go to school September-May? Why, so they can go out and help with the crops in the summer, of course. Look at the amount of headway year-round schooling (go to school 2 months, off 3 weeks) has made - little to none! Even though many things point to it being superior in various ways. But damn it, kids get the summer off, that's how the world works. The original reasoning behind it has long been abandoned and forgotten.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    14. Re:Amen by adrianmonk · · Score: 1

      I never understood school schedules. It has been shown that teenagers naturally wake up later in the day, and that elementary school students wake up earlier. Yet it is the elementary schools that start at 8:30 and the high schools that start at 7:30.

      One possible reasoning it's hard to understand is that you're assuming the purpose of school is mainly to educate kids, and you're trying to find something that follows logically for that. I suggest questioning that assumption. School is 25% about learning stuff and 75% about social conditioning, so getting students to wake up early, which is the normative thing, is a priority.

      Also, when I went to school (which, admittedly, is now quite some time ago), it was the same time (8:30am) for all 12 years. This is the type of thing that varies a lot from one area to the next.

    15. Re:Amen by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

      Welcome to Canada?

      Um as a real response to your question, because Americans are dumb? Or Need to be diffrent?

      Who knows. It's like worshipping a rock, you know it's stupid but its pretty hard to convince people to stop.

    16. Re:Amen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Obviously you haven't worked a hard day in your life."

      Fuck you, you unbelievable asshole.

      Why is it that many blue collar workers assume that white collar jobs aren't hard, just because they don't involve muscle? If they're not hard, why aren't you doing them? You might enjoy using your brain, and the pay might even be better.

    17. Re:Amen by 2short · · Score: 1


      I don't think most businesses would change their hours seasonally without DST. I think they would pick one set of hours and stick with it all year. I beleive experience from before DST and from places that don't observe it support this. If I understand you correctly, so far we agree.

      We disagree in that I think keeping the same hours (relative to the sun) all year round is undesirable. I think it's better for most to start our days earlier in the summer, but that we won't do it if we don't all do it together.

      In the summer time, even with DST, most people I know get up long after sunrise and go to bed well after dark. But in the depths of winter, most people I know get up just after sunrise. I conclude that not getting up before sunrise, even in the winter, is the driving concern that ultimately sets business hours, and thus that despite your intuition, hours won't move forward year round.

    18. Re:Amen by TilJ · · Score: 1

      What is this 9-5 of which you speak? Seriously, I've never heard of a job that operates on a literal 9am-to-5pm schedule. Maybe it's an American thing (I'm Canadian).

      8-5, sure. 7:30-4:30 or 7-4, for those of us who want to avoid the worst of the traffic and get 20 minutes a day of our life back. But to only be at work for 8 continuous hours seems strange to me ... I've never met anyone with a job like that. How does lunch work? Do you get a lunch? Is it part of the paid time?

      --
      "The purpose of argument is to change the nature of truth." -- Bene Gesserit Precept
    19. Re:Amen by Rakarra · · Score: 1
      How does lunch work? Do you get a lunch? Is it part of the paid time?

      For me, it's a working lunch. I quickly grab lunch at the cafe, continue working while eating at my desk. Sometimes I take off for lunch with coworkers, spending an extra hour afterwards, but for the most part I would rather skip the "break," head out early, and spend the extra time with my significant other.

    20. Re:Amen by GWBasic · · Score: 1

      I never understood school schedules. It has been shown that teenagers naturally wake up later in the day, and that elementary school students wake up earlier. Yet it is the elementary schools that start at 8:30 and the high schools that start at 7:30. Why not make school like work, where it runs 9-5, on a schedule more matching that of the parents? Some will counter that high school students have jobs in the evening, so let them start earlier. Why should jobs drive school schedules?

      Because school is supposed to turn our children into good conformists. It gives students the illusion that they must painfully conform to an artifical reality in order to succeed in life. "The powers that be" create the artificial reality so that they can enslave the conformists.

  21. Are you high? by ObiWanStevobi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First of all, this is a move by congress, no one is bashing "The Administration"

    No harm, no foul, huh? How about the time it took to patch my file transfer program. I'm sure my employers don't appreciate the extra money spent. Not to mention tying up our IT staff trying to get time clocks/etc. fixed when the Windows patch f#$%ed up the time then fixed it again two days later. There's two days of pay for the IT staff, not to mention lost time where other things didn't get fixed.

    And it's us who look like giant douches for complaining?!!

    1. Re:Are you high? by GrayCalx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And it's us who look like giant douches for complaining?!!

      No, you don't look like a giant douche for complaining. I think the original poster was responding more to the tone of the summary which seemed... angry that they even attempted something to conserve energy.

      I don't think its a liberal/conservative thing, but I do think its a great example of you're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't for the government. Had they not changed DST after it was proposed the environmentalists (or rather those wanting to conserve energy) would be complaining, "The government never does anything to even TRY to conserve power!"

      Someone had this idea. It didn't work (surprise, surprise) and now you have people complaining, "I can't believe you even TRIED this?!?"

      So I'm very sorry that you had so much additional work to do and your company lost so much money, but if it helps there is probably an environmentalist somewhere who is smiling... or at least frowning less.

      /damned if you do damned if you don't.
      //can't please all of the people all of the time.

    2. Re:Are you high? by sqlrob · · Score: 1, Informative

      Still the administrations fault. He could've vetoed it.

    3. Re:Are you high? by Lockejaw · · Score: 1

      I think the original poster was responding more to the tone of the summary which seemed... angry that they even attempted something to conserve energy.
      You and the OP must be reading a different summary than what I'm seeing. The one I see complains that they produced energy conservation legislation that doesn't conserve energy. It's kinda like "security theater" -- people who complain about it aren't saying that improving security is a waste of time. Now we've expanded from security theater to energy-saving theater.

      Someone had this idea. It didn't work (surprise, surprise) and now you have people complaining, "I can't believe you even TRIED this?!?"
      There was also the part when they were considering it when those people were all saying, "Don't bother, it's not going to improve anything."
      --
      (IANAL)
    4. Re:Are you high? by JhohannaVH · · Score: 1

      Gotta love j o b s e c u r i t y! :D

      --
      Sorry man... the Internet pooped on me.
    5. Re:Are you high? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      The problem is, you could propose that the sky was blue on a clear day and there would be 20% of the population that would swear it would never be blue.

      I've administered groups of people. There are always 10-20% of people who misunderstood, are naturally disagreeable, are stupid, have some social agenda- who knows, maybe genetically random behavior has a certain reward- anyway- often the only way to stop the arguing and prove something will work or fail is to do it.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    6. Re:Are you high? by prockcore · · Score: 1

      angry that they even attempted something to conserve energy.


      More like, angry that congress ignored everyone who said it wouldn't work. Angry that congress made a policy change based on data that's 35 years old. Angry that congress didn't list to the people that pointed out that Australia came to the same conclusion 7 years ago when they tried it and actually increased morning energy usage.
    7. Re:Are you high? by Nimey · · Score: 1

      How is the parent a troll? He's absolutely right that Bush had to sign the steaming pile, though he wasn't likely to veto the entire bill over just one provision.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    8. Re:Are you high? by corbettw · · Score: 1

      The one I see complains that they produced energy conservation legislation that doesn't conserve energy.

      I want you to remember this rant of yours the next time some hippy says we should implement the Kyoto Protocol since "something has to be done, we might as well try that." Since that's a common argument from environmentalists, I'm sure it won't be too long before someone says something like that.

      Oh wait, here's someone making pretty much that very argument right here!

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    9. Re:Are you high? by sqlrob · · Score: 1

      Mod obviously never took civics and doesn't understand "checks and balances". Sadly, a common state in the American public.

    10. Re:Are you high? by Talgrath · · Score: 1

      There's a big difference here; the Kyoto Protocol actually WOULD save energy because it is an attempt to reduce emissions and a increase in miles per gallon on vehicles which means less fossil fuels being burned, fossil fuels are stored chemical energy, thus reducing the use of fossil fuels increases energy efficiency assuming that more energy isn't expended to make cars more efficient than would be used on regular cars (or at least that the increased energy to make the car is less than the average lifetime energy savings on fossile fuels). The idea behind this little gem that Congress put out was to reduce energy use by changing when Daylight Savings Time began to increase natural light use, theoretically meaning people would use less electricity. Others already have said why this was a bad idea when it was proposed, but some reasons include that people would use more electricity in the morning instead of at night (getting up earlier means less morning light) and the fact that simply put, lights are no longer the dominate drain on our electricity use; household items and computers are and their use is not going to be effected by when Daylight Savings Time starts, you still need to use that computer at work and your fridge still needs to be on all day.

    11. Re:Are you high? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about my wife bitching at me because I didn't pick up my daughter on time? I properly patched the Win2K DST setting (seen the MS instructions for Uraguay's DST change from a few years ago). But Novell's GroupWeird calendar decided it should shift the entire calendar an hour later, so every appointment would still be on "standard time".

    12. Re:Are you high? by toddestan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, he could have used a signing statement saying that he wasn't going to follow the new rules, then follow through by not changing the clocks in the oval office. That would have shown them!

    13. Re:Are you high? by Nimey · · Score: 1

      He could have declared Daylight Saving Time an enemy combatant and banished it to an undisclosed location.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    14. Re:Are you high? by lividdr · · Score: 1

      First of all, this is a move by congress, no one is bashing "The Administration"

      There's two days of pay for the IT staff, not to mention lost time where other things didn't get fixed.

      Wait, let me get this straight - you pay your IT staff for overtime and weekends? Please, tell me more of this mythical place where personal time is not defined as what is left over when work is finished.

      --
      Give a man a beer and he wastes an hour. Teach a man to brew and he wastes a lifetime.
    15. Re:Are you high? by ObiWanStevobi · · Score: 1

      Give you some hints:

      "Yeah, you betcha, eh." is an accepted common response to many questions, and Ronald Reagan never won an electoral vote here.

      If you're still stumped, this magical land has 10,000 lakes, borders Canada, and is the source of the Mississippi river.

  22. Fuel Usage by duplicate-nickname · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I remember a local news story the week of the 11th stating that there was actually an increase in gas use after the DST change because people were driving more now that it stay light out later.

    --

    ÕÕ

  23. the DST change might still be good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i mean, i never even heard the power saving rationale. I had heard that the new system was better for sunlight purposes. As far as i heard, it simply meant that DST would happen earlier in the spring and later in the fall. WHich means that we get "more" hours of daylight at an earlier date each spring when the clocks get set ahead. And in the Fall, we "lose" an hour of daylight but this happens later in the winter than normal.

    which is a good thing in my book.

  24. This just in by stratjakt · · Score: 0

    I've been able to ride home from work with the top down in my convertable the last few weeks.

    Who fucking cares about energy savings or not, and quit trying to repackage every fucking story as "BUSH SUCKS", please.

    Also, there isn't enough data to conclude that it's had "no impact" yet.

    Al Gore wants me to unplug my xbox when I'm not using it, so it wont use power in standby mode and "every bit helps" - but nobody calls bullshit on that sort of idiocy. If the 0.05 watts my xbox uses when it's off is "helping", then so is this.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    1. Re:This just in by AusIV · · Score: 1

      I don't see how this is saying Bush sucks. It blamed congress for the change in Daylight savings time, and last I checked, congress is run by the Democrats.

    2. Re:This just in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are full of shit, the xbox uses a fsck load more than 50mW when you're not playing 90s style games or watching pirated TV/DVDs. I won't tell you what it really uses, go buy yourself a kilawatt device and measure it, along with the rest of your toys.

    3. Re:This just in by SydShamino · · Score: 1

      I dunno about your XBox, but my Wii consumes 1.3 Watts when in standby, provided that WiiConnect24 is disabled. It consumes about 10 Watts in standby with WiiConnect24. That was sufficient different to disable the feature. Though I still leave it plugged in when not in use.

      Yes, I have one of those home power consumption monitors. All my home electricity is already from wind/solar, so I'm more concerned with saving money than saving the planet.

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
    4. Re:This just in by 47Ronin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't see how this is saying Bush sucks. It blamed congress for the change in Daylight savings time, and last I checked, congress is run by the Democrats.

      BZZZZT! You lose. Maybe you should wind back the clock and note who was in control of Congress when this bill was signed. Can you guess which party had control of both the House and the Senate at the time?

      --
      Those who laugh at you for you having a Mac.. are the people who constantly call you to fix their PC.
    5. Re:This just in by AusIV · · Score: 1

      You're right, August 08, 2005. I had assumed this was some half-assed attempt by the republicans to appease the new Democratic congress. Looks like I was wrong. Now it looks like it was just a half-assed attempt by the republicans to actually save energy.

    6. Re:This just in by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1

      I don't see how this is saying Bush sucks. It blamed congress for the change in Daylight savings time, and last I checked, congress is run by the Democrats. Well, to be fair, it was still a Republican congress when the change was passed as part of the Energy Policy Act of 2005; but either way it doesn't fuckin' matter. It would have passed now too, were it included in a Democrat sponsored energy bill. They're all idiots, each and every one of them. Not the stupid kind of idiots, but the much more dangerous smart kind of idiots who know they're participating in a farce. The problem with government nowadays is that the kind of person who can get elected to office is exactly the sort of person you don't want in office. I say burn the place down and start over.
      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    7. Re:This just in by PPH · · Score: 1

      Just count your blessings. The GOP has been trying to turn the clocks back to the Dark Ages ever since they gained the majority in Congress.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    8. Re:This just in by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      I've been able to ride home from work with the top down in my convertable the last few weeks. Why weren't you riding home from work with the top down in your convertible before daylight savings? Was it raining?

      Let me get this straight: you bought a vehicle with a top that could be removed--paid extra money for that feature no less--so that you could put the top up because it was dark?!

      "Darn, I can't drive with the top down because it's dark. I mean, I can't very well let all that darkness into my car. It'll ruin the upholstery."

      I'm sorry. Please turn in your convertible at the door on the way out.

      :^) :^) :^) :^)
    9. Re:This just in by geekoid · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yeah, the democrates have been in office for 4 months and just look at Iraq! republuicans never would have let that happen.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  25. In other news by ccbutler · · Score: 5, Funny

    Water utilities claim there was no measureable impact to water consumption after their "hold your pee in for an hour before going to the bathroom" campaign wrapped up last weekend, in an effort to minimize water consumption and save the planet of resources. =P

    1. Re:In other news by Luyseyal · · Score: 1

      I thought the secret to water conservation was "if it's yellow leave it mellow; if it's brown flush it down". Are you telling me there's a "hold it" corollary?

      -l

      --
      Help cure AIDS, cancer, and more. Donate your unused computer time to worldcommunitygrid.org. Join Team Slashdot!
  26. Extra daylight == $ for businesses by wiz31337 · · Score: 1

    I didn't really buy the energy savings part of it from the start.

    The only thing I can think of is that the DST change is good for businesses because it makes it lighter longer three weeks earlier. I don't know if this is true or not but this may make people more inclined to go run an errand right after work rather than going straight home and waiting until the weekend.

    Just a thought.

    --
    /whisper/ Thanks for the candy!
  27. More effort and labor spent by HungWeiLo · · Score: 2, Funny

    When I had to switch my clock back on Ubuntu (the timezone fix did not make it in the apt-get updates somehow), my makefile on my hour-long build project refused to build (citing misalignment of the timestamps of the files). So I had to delete all my files and fetch them all again after I put the clock back to the way it was before.

    After that, I turned on my amp and surround sound system and watched a movie during lunch while blasting away the AC because I got so hot from all the work.

    --
    There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
    1. Re:More effort and labor spent by jd · · Score: 1
      I usually do a: touch `find`

      Seems to get all the timestamps to "now", which is all that matters. Timestamps have no practical value other than for impressing the boss with how late you worked - for just about anything else, any incremental system that preserves sequential coherency is just as good as any other. A file version counter, a-la VMS, would be just as effective and wouldn't need nearly as much storage.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    2. Re:More effort and labor spent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > (the timezone fix did not make it in the apt-get updates somehow)

      Actually, the Ubuntu DST is broken. Last I checked the forums, it was 11 pages deep without a distinct pattern to figure out the bug yet.

  28. It would mean REMOVING patches... by erroneus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...and I'm all for it!

    This DST2007 thing has been a real pain in my ass. I know that the US government hates to admit failure, so we won't leave Iraq and we won't back off on DST2007... wish we would though. It has caused a lot of problems.

    1. Re:It would mean REMOVING patches... by linuxwrangler · · Score: 1

      No, it would mean patching all over again. TZ info is a cumulative record of time changes. If changed back, we will have to update everything with files that reflect those changes without changing history. Nobody is going to go back and say that noon March 30 Daylight Time was now, retroactively, 11am March 30 Standard Time.

      --

      ~~~~~~~
      "You are not remembered for doing what is expected of you." - Atul Chitnis
    2. Re:It would mean REMOVING patches... by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      o, it would mean patching all over again. TZ info is a cumulative record of time changes. If changed back, we will have to update everything with files that reflect those changes without changing history.


      Well, it is on systems that don't suck, anyway. Most of us run windows though... Windows doesn't seem to have any concept of what DST was in the past.

    3. Re:It would mean REMOVING patches... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      The thing that really amazes me is that they moved the DST times to almost mesh with Europe (which standardised back in the late '90s), but not quite. If you've ever been on a transatlantic flight the day the times change, you'll know what the problem is. I've done it twice, both with Virgin Atlantic. Once they got the departure time wrong by an hour, the other time they got the arrival time wrong.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    4. Re:It would mean REMOVING patches... by gemada · · Score: 1

      This DST2007 thing has been a real pain in my ass. I know that the US government hates to admit failure, so we won't leave Iraq and we won't back off on DST2007... wish we would though. It has caused a lot of problems.

      not quite as many problems as the Iraq thing has caused.......

  29. Please explain DST by pembo13 · · Score: 1

    I have not yet understand the theory behind DST, ie. what is _supposed_ to be the actual benefit.

    --
    "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
    1. Re:Please explain DST by sh00z · · Score: 1

      It benefits the chamber of commerce. More daylight after normal 9-5 working hours means more people will go out shopping. The last time this was tried (in 1986 or so), the golf industry made an extra $200 million in income.

    2. Re:Please explain DST by dfoulger · · Score: 1

      The idea is simple. Extend the number of daylight hours during which people are awake. Extend the number of darkness hours during which people are asleep. If you can do this without changing the business cycle (when people go to and finish school and work), they wind up with more free time during daylight hours, which can only be healthy for you (more vitamin D, more exercise, etc).

      Expecting it to make a huge difference in energy expenditures, one way or the other, was a pipe dream, but I, for one, prefer the geometry of the day when DST is in force, and wish it was year round.

      --
      Davis http://davis.foulger.net
    3. Re:Please explain DST by iabervon · · Score: 1

      The energy benefit is supposed to be that people have their lights on at night for less time, because they go to bed at a time which is closer to the time the sun sets. In the morning, they don't need to turn on their lights at all because it's light already, because it's summer. Of course, this requires that it actually be light when people are getting up, so there's limited gains for making DST last longer.

    4. Re:Please explain DST by rapidweather · · Score: 1
      The last time this was tried (in 1986 or so), the golf industry made an extra $200 million in income.


      More people are out playing golf and other outdoor sports because of the shift between the clock's time and the position of the Sun in the evening sky.
      Not just sports, but all of the DIY people, repairing cars, cutting grass, working in the garden, working on a little construction project outside, such as building a deck. I put a roof on my house working until the sun went down. Took a while, as I removed the old roof (in stages) and put a new one on. Saved thousands.


      On the other end of the day, when you have to get up before dawn, you're going to have to go to your job, work, etc. Better to get that over with, as most of us work for someone else, and you might as well start early, so you can get home early, and work for yourself, if it involves the outdoors, and the need for sunlight to see what you are doing. Even if you just go outside and look at your garden. Life's too short to get up, go to work, come home in the dark.
      Perhaps the current pattern referred to as Daylight Savings Time will give you some outdoor time to enjoy life.

  30. We all knew that wasn't the reason anyway... by mandelbr0t · · Score: 0, Troll

    I never bought the "energy saving" crap anyway. Compared to what they were spending on the Iraq war, the figures they presented were pathetically low, especially given the effort to change it. All I had to do was look at all of the hardware clocks at home to realize what the real reason was: electronic warfare. Anyone that didn't pony up large chunks of change to the DST consultants had to deal with the embarassment (at a minimum) of having their clocks be out-of-whack for 3 full weeks. I'd imagine that most of the DST consultants were American, too. Let's add up all the consulting bills to fix this articificial problem to find out what the real economic driver was.

    I despise the bastards who came up with this foolish idea. I wish that people were intelligent enough to realize that their government has once again lied to them about their motives. They should be demanding results for such an expensive implementation, and there is a conspicuous lack thereof. I, for one, can see through this transparent American malevolence. I only wish Canada would declare war so I could do something about it.

    --
    "Please describe the scientific nature of the 'whammy'" - Agent Scully
    1. Re:We all knew that wasn't the reason anyway... by l0ungeb0y · · Score: 1
      I only wish Canada would declare war so I could do something about it.

      Ya, and throwing pancakes and syrup across your borders will do what exactly?
      Now excuse me while I go roll with laughter at the idea of the invasion of the flappy heads.

    2. Re:We all knew that wasn't the reason anyway... by mandelbr0t · · Score: 1

      No wonder the rest of the world hates you. Try considering a country other than your own for a change.

      BTW, the pancakes and maple syrup will be blasted at you from the Chicken Cannon. After that we will taunt you. Then the guy with a C-8 sitting a thousand yards from you will put a hole in your head. Just because we won't win doesn't mean I won't take as many of you fuckers with me as I can.

      --
      "Please describe the scientific nature of the 'whammy'" - Agent Scully
    3. Re:We all knew that wasn't the reason anyway... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      tough talk for a country that bans guns.

  31. split the difference by FudRucker · · Score: 1

    i wish the "spring forward" and "fall back" thing would stop! i wish the world would just split the difference and leave the clocks alone! next fall move the clocks back 30 minutes and never move them forward or back again, this daylight savings time does not do anything beneficial...

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
    1. Re:split the difference by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

      Sure it is beneficial - I have billed lots of hours to fix computers all over the place and it still hasn't stopped. There is still one damn machine that refuses to change its clock no matter what I do - more $$$...

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    2. Re:split the difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I don't know about splitting the difference, but I'm for leaving it alone! I'm one of the few people that has a real hard time adjusting to the change in time. It takes me about a week to reset my internal clock.

      Jet lag? Arrrgh! It's a REAL bitch for me. I can't take jobs that require a lot of travel. Which REALLY sucks because they're the ones that pay really well!

    3. Re:split the difference by Peter+Mork · · Score: 1

      Ah, you've identified the crux of the issue. The more we frak with the clock, the more money we waste on useless programming. But these $$$ count as GDP even though not we haven't seen a penny of economic benefit. Enjoy your paycheck for spinning your wheels. Some of us expect to see a benefit from our labors.

  32. Another Central Planning success story!!! by BarnabyWilde · · Score: 1

    Whoopeee! That's what you get with central planning.

    No surprise it was a flop. Duh.

    Can't wait for scoialized medicine!!!!

    1. Re:Another Central Planning success story!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't wait for scoialized medicine!!!!

      I didn't know Darl was a doctor.
  33. er by Jethro · · Score: 1

    Wow, that was unbiased.

    The new DST helped me out a lot. I like it when it's lighter out later, earlier in the year. I vote we stay on this time all year round. Switching around at all is dumb.

    --


    In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is kinky.
  34. Good logic by StikyPad · · Score: 1

    But the new DST is probably here to stay -- letting the bill expire would mean re-patching a lot of systems again next year.

    Because whether or not systems need to be re-patched is the primary concern of lawmakers. I can see the debate now:

    Senator 1: "Let's just let the bill expire. Or we can fillibuster it if you fillibuster our 'Feed the Homeless' bill."

    Senator 2: "Are you insane, man? Just think of all the system patches necessary to get things back the way they were. I'll not be part of any such scandal! I'll still fillibuster your Feed the Homeless bill though, but only because of the rider that provides free health care for anyone who can't otherwise afford it."

  35. Re:Thanks Democratic lead congress by faloi · · Score: 1

    I see that your campaign promise to do something about the price of gas is really kicking in now.

    They ARE doing something. Those gas prices won't increase themselves, you know!

    --
    "It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education." -Albert Einstein
  36. It's also been unseasonably warm by stratjakt · · Score: 1

    ACs are running that werent last year.

    You cant extrapolate "it doesnt help" from one months worth of data. I dont see how you can get any meaningful conclusions from it.

    Unless you have an agenda, in which case you'll find support for it in an old can of Chef Boyardee.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    1. Re:It's also been unseasonably warm by DragonWriter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You cant extrapolate "it doesnt help" from one months worth of data.


      You can with a change in DST that is supposed to save energy on both ends, and only affects one month on each end.

      For other things, maybe not.
    2. Re:It's also been unseasonably warm by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Give it a few years and then you can start computing averages.

      We only have one data element right now. Can you prove that it isn't an anomaly? Can you prove to me that the power we saved wasnt offset by the power used to deal with an unseasonably warm spring?

      Talk to me in 10 years or so.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    3. Re:It's also been unseasonably warm by DragonWriter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We only have one data element right now.


      We have quite a few; first, its supposed to reduce it by reducing daily demand, and its supposed to do it generally across the nation. You don't need multiple years of data to get a decent idea of what is going on with that; you can look at the data from one month daily and by region, and see to what degree it appears to be true. Or you could look at the overall average over all regions and days, and see that the number is not different that what would have been expected without the change.

      Of course, one might posit that there is some reason to expect that this month was systematically atypical in a way which would distort the results, but those making that claim ought to have something to point to to justify it.

      Can you prove to me that the power we saved wasnt offset by the power used to deal with an unseasonably warm spring?


      First, "unseasonably warm spring" is somewhat irrelevant (and not established) as its not even 2 weeks into the 13 weeks of Spring, yet, and a significant portion of the new DST time is in winter.

      Secondly, even considering the right time period, where is the evidence that an unseasonably warm March increases energy demand? Certainly, in the hottest areas it may increase cooling demand, but in much of the country a warm late-winter-to-early-spring is going to save energy by reducing cooling demand.

  37. Re:Don't foget about October.... (for the children by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't understand that. Who trick or treats in the daylight? We always waited till it was dark to go out, and we liked it that way.

  38. Extra sunshine isn't such a good thing. by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 2, Funny
    I'm not suprised. DST is a very bad idea. All that extra sunshine makes it hotter. This burns the lawn and means you need more air conditioning.

    On the flip side though, all the exta sunshine makes crops grow better so it should make farmers happier!

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
    1. Re:Extra sunshine isn't such a good thing. by eln · · Score: 3, Funny

      Speak for yourself. I've been saving daylight for decades, and I've had enough. My whole garage is filled with jars of daylight. The last thing I need is MORE daylight savings.

      Sure, I could put all of that daylight into a Daylight Savings Bank, but I don't trust those guys. I don't need some big corporation earning fat interest loaning my daylight out to other people and giving me a 0.4% APR on it.

    2. Re:Extra sunshine isn't such a good thing. by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      So to simplify tings cities could go off DST and farmers could go on DST at least during the winter time to help crops grow. If you live in the suburb and have a garden or lawn you would have the option to change to DST or not otherwise you stay off the DST time.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    3. Re:Extra sunshine isn't such a good thing. by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 1

      But if everyone saves daylight that reduces its value. Need to tell people it is poisonous or causes cancer. People will then dump all theirs, improving the value of your stock!

      --
      Engineering is the art of compromise.
    4. Re:Extra sunshine isn't such a good thing. by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      I agree. The last thing that I need is to have an intern at the bank get curious about what it looks like, take a peep inside the jar, and then let the light escape.

      What kind of jars do you use? I use jars with mirrors facing inwards. It keeps the light bouncing around forever.

    5. Re:Extra sunshine isn't such a good thing. by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      That's a good idea. Maybe the farmers could go on daylight savings each year, but not come off it. That should give them lots of daylight after a few years.

    6. Re:Extra sunshine isn't such a good thing. by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      And perhaps they could withdraw from their daylight savings account on cloudy days in order to get better yields.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
  39. there are other benifits to the new DST change... by vingilot · · Score: 1

    like having more sun in the evening to exercise outside after work. Normally its still dark. I like the change.

  40. Oh Well by TheFlyingGoat · · Score: 1

    Nobody was 100% sure if it would save energy or not, so it was a good idea to try it and find out. At least we know now and nobody should push to adjust it again in the future. Sure, it may have caused some IT workers to spend some extra time on the job, but the hourly ones should appreciate that and perhaps the salaried ones got a little bonus or pat on the back. Other than that, it's really no harm done.

    It's nice to see the government try something in an effort to help solve energy issues. Hopefully they'll continue that without all the bipartisan bickering (yeah right).

    --
    You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. --Winston Churchill
    1. Re:Oh Well by NuShrike · · Score: 1

      You shouldn't try things that'll cost you more than you save. http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2005-07-22 -daylight-congress_x.htm

      How about converting entirely to CFLs and/or raising CAFE standards? These actually try to solve something instead of hand waving.

    2. Re:Oh Well by ryanov · · Score: 1

      Not old enough to remember the last time they tried this? Neither am I, but... crack open the archives and you'll see that this was already done in the 70's and it worked about as well.

    3. Re:Oh Well by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but they didn't have as much light back then.

  41. Fun Time had by all by tim620 · · Score: 1

    I'm glad the government waisted my time. I got to spend more time at work prior to March 17 applying patches on servers, etc. Thank you, US government, I was so bored at work with nothing else to do prior to the new DST and to hear that is was a waste, really makes me feel good, especially about you. :-)

    1. Re:Fun Time had by all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You got paid for your work so quit complaining. If anything, your employer should be the one complaining that he had to pay you to fix all the computers.

    2. Re:Fun Time had by all by tim620 · · Score: 1

      It was meant to be a funny joke, but I'm sorry if you took it seriously. I wasn't really trying to complain....but, now that you mention it, I am salaried, so no, my company didn't pay me anything extra for the overtime I wasted updating our servers. Time that I could have used on other things...anyways, I digress and you'll probably chew me out again for complaining... :-)

  42. Definitely Agree by sirket · · Score: 1

    Short days that get dark early are depressing. The early change made a big difference for me and I could not care less if it did not save any power.

    -sirket

    1. Re:Definitely Agree by Aranel+Alasse · · Score: 1

      I agree, wholeheartedly! :)

  43. Modded funny? by TheDarkener · · Score: 4, Informative

    If I had mod points, I'd mod Informative!!

    Seriously, this "useful" change was nothing but a waste of time, AND clocks. All those clocks/devices that automatically change according to the standardized time? Useless. Software patches? Quite impossible for most.

    Looks like the waste management facilities will see a rise in borked electronics because of this - and that does precisely 0 for the environment, too.

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    1. Re:Modded funny? by qwijibo · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm going to start a charity to collect these DST impaired clocks. You can ship me your clocks and I will distribute them to chronometer-impaired individuals throughout the non-DST observing state of Arizona.

    2. Re:Modded funny? by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 2, Funny

      Are you serious? Because my wife has one of these clocks by her bed. I can't bear to hear her complain about the wonderful 109th Congress four times a year.

      These people in Arizona are going to have NO EXCUSE for oversleeping with all the used alarm clocks they're going to get.

  44. I don't. by mobby_6kl · · Score: 4, Funny

    In fact, I fucking hate it. The sun is trying to kill me, and giving it any more opportunities to do that doesn't make me any happier.

    1. Re:I don't. by Unicorn+Giggles · · Score: 1

      I know exactly what you mean, there is a good reason why I have six different pairs of sunglasses in my car and shades and curtains for my windows.

  45. This is not news by BlindRobin · · Score: 1

    It has been known for decades that gasoline consumption, in particular increases, with DST, and that commerce in general benefits from DST. The energy savings argument has always been, when considered across the entire spectrum of energy consumption, quite obviously spurious.

  46. Saved no power THIS year... by Bobfrankly1 · · Score: 1

    I work for a K-12 school district in California and this year, we probably used MORE energy turning on all the computers early to patch them before the staff came in. If there are ANY benefits to be seen, it's highly unlikely to see them in the first year of a transition. Lets see how things turn out next year...eh, who am I fooling :P

    Power Savings Activated........disabling spel check
    c:/>_

  47. Carbon-offset by rodney+dill · · Score: 3, Funny

    I used my saved energy as a carbon offset to burn additional energy.

    --

    Use your head, can't you, use your head,
    You're on earth, there's no cure for that
    - S. Beckett
    1. Re:Carbon-offset by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      you burned energy...


      OH SHI-***no carrier***

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  48. Re:there are other benifits to the new DST change. by Mr.+No+Skills · · Score: 3, Funny

    "exercise outside"

    Wrong web site...

    We're struggling with sun glare on the screen while firing up Counter Strike...

    --
    Sleep is for the Weak
  49. Damn straight.. by Omega · · Score: 1

    It's like getting an extra hour in my evening. Especially when the weather warms up and it's nice outside. I can do more after work thanks to the longer daylight.

    Plus, I'll be interested to see if the claim of fewer children getting hit by cars in Halloweeen holds up -- now that DST ends after Halloween and not before.

  50. Selfish Bastard by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not for those of us who have visual overstimulation induced migraines. This just means that they've stolen several hours of my precious DARKNESS in return for no monetary advantage.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  51. We spent more electicity by DogcowX · · Score: 1

    keeping everyone around on the weekends and evenings to fix all the 2007 DST issues.

  52. Dude, I'm coming to lyrictalk.net by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm coming to your site, and I'm going to jump into every conversation, not matter if it's related or not, and I'm going to complain that people are bashing the current administration, even if they're not, no matter who the current administration is. That should be fun, eh?

  53. In other news... by Larus · · Score: 1

    OSHA lead paint investigations saved no children. Used clothes donations saved no poor people in Africa. Ethanol saved no gasoline dependence. 401k saved no declining prospects for retirement. Increased polls saved no political degeneracy. Parent advocacies saved no teenage promiscuity. 24-hour Fitness saved no unrestricted appetite for beer, pizza, and chocolate.

    Don't expect the society to heal individual ills.

  54. Look on the bright side... by Kadin2048 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    3) Congress wasted time on this bill that could have been spent getting something important done, such as finally hammering out a definate government policy on Stem Cell research, abortions, or actually making a true impact on the energy issue we face.

    See, that's the glass-half-empty talking. Just look on the bright side: When they were wasting their time turning out this ridiculous waste of time and paper, it meant that they weren't really screwing anything else up!

    Please, Congress, do us all a favor: spend your time on things like creating new "National $FOO Week"s. What -- there aren't any free weeks left? Okay, I've got one: why don't you guys try to fix the date of Easter? I'm sure that won't take you too long.

    The more idiotic, banal stuff that I know the Congresscritters are doing, the better it makes me feel, because at least I know they're staying out of trouble. It's when they go quiet for a while that I start to worry. The further away they stay from the "real issues," the happier I am. As absolutely fucked as the system we have is, don't you even think for a moment that with hard work and diligence, they couldn't make it at least ten times worse.

    Congratulations, Congress, on your brilliant plan. By all means, keep up the great work.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    1. Re:Look on the bright side... by Chmcginn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The fact that there's more "funny" than "insightful" mods on this comment worries me.

      --
      Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?
    2. Re:Look on the bright side... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ya know, the two arent exactly mutually exclusive...

    3. Re:Look on the bright side... by PureApple · · Score: 2, Funny

      Laughing is so close to crying... :( :)

    4. Re:Look on the bright side... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember this bill was part of the republican lead congress not the now Democrat controlled body. Please keep that in mind when discussing this. It just shows you how dumb that republican congress was.

  55. Re:Thanks Democratic lead congress by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

    Because the dems are the reason Iraq is going to hell and relations with Iran are declining rapidly, thus creating market instability, all while we're entering peak fuel consumption season?

  56. Prior experience by asackett · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What amazes me about the whole thing is that nobody bothered to look back to 1973 when Nixon did essentially the same thing. No energy was saved then, either.

    --

    Warning: This signature may offend some viewers.

    1. Re:Prior experience by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      What amazes me about the whole thing is that nobody bothered to look back to 1973 when Nixon did essentially the same thing. No energy was saved then, either.

      No way, man! Everything is different now! Nixon was a crook!

      Oh, wait...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Prior experience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      say you want to make some changes, changes that make people angry.
      how do you prevent those people from rising up against those changes.

      easy give them jet lag, most of us are to tired to rise up against those changes when they happen
      let alone think clearly about them.
      i wonder why elections are not held during national jet lag weeks

    3. Re:Prior experience by Keeper · · Score: 1

      Oh, people bothered to, it was just ignored. I mean, what else would you expect from an administration who's energy policy consists of financing infrastructure improvements for the industry while it is earning billions in profits?

    4. Re:Prior experience by jambarama · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Daylight savings doesn't save energy, but it does do something. It gives us more daylight at night. Which gives us more time for shopping and spending money. I read a report showing a jump in retail sales the last the last time they changed daylight savings.

      And this year the candy companies hit the holy grail. An hour more light for halloween, and trick-or-treating.

    5. Re:Prior experience by Black-Man · · Score: 1

      Big difference being a crook versus just being a dumb ass.

    6. Re:Prior experience by Arleigh2 · · Score: 1

      Capitalist considerations (either positive or negative) aside, I have always thought it would be better to have another hour of light for very young children who have to wait for a parent to get home from work before they can go out trick-or-treating.

    7. Re:Prior experience by ShadowsHawk · · Score: 1

      I've been toying with this exact theory for years. My original idea though, was that they purposefully reduce the amount of sunlight around Christmas. This supposedly brings on 'seasonal depression'. Since giving and receiving makes people happy, they spend more.

    8. Re:Prior experience by ks*nut · · Score: 0

      Jesus, the PC didn't even exist in 1973. I'm sure many viewed it as a WTF experience, but in the context of the rest of the shenanigans going on at the time...

      Karl Rove and Dick Cheney (the real deciders) didn't bother checking on whether people would be at all inconvenienced by the DST switch. And compared with what they're doing to the Iraqi people the DST switch doesn't even make it on to the radar.

      Someone else mentioned it - let's switch to GMT and be done with it.

    9. Re:Prior experience by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 1

      I don't know about everyone else but I started taking my kids for a walk to the park after dinner.

      --
      Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!

      http://financialpetition.org/
  57. How much did it cost to figure this out? by papercut2a · · Score: 1

    *I* could have told them it didn't save energy. I felt much more tired after the time change. :-P

  58. Useful to us! by spun · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm a lobbyist with the North American Automatically Time Changing Clock, Watch and Timepiece Manufacturers Association and we paid good money to have this bill passed so that we can sell more automatically changing clocks, watches and timepieces.

    Record profits this year, my friend, record profits. You should have invested in manufacturers of automatically changing clocks, watches and timepieces.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    1. Re:Useful to us! by 511pf · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm also lobbyist - with the North American Pro-Obesity, Chocolate Loving Candy Manufacturers Association and we paid good money to have this bill passed so that Halloween will have an extra hour of daylight this year.

      Record profits this year, my friend, record profits. You should have invested in manufacturers of chocolate, bon-bons and candy-bars.

  59. Let's change it again. by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1
    letting the bill expire would mean re-patching a lot of systems again next year. So much for saving energy."

    Instead of just letting the bill expire, I propose changing to another set of dates for the spring and fall DST changes. Let's see, the spring DST change would occur on the third Tuesday after the second full moon of the year. The fall DST change would occur two weeks and three days after peak fall foliage occurs in northern Vermont.

    1. Re:Let's change it again. by vrmlguy · · Score: 1

      No, I've got a better idea: Let's introduce *double* and *triple* DST. You'd have three months in the winter of "normal" time, roughly six weeks in the spring and six more in the fall where clocks are moved forward one hour, six more weeks in spring and fall where clocks are moved forward two hours, and then three months in the summer where the clocks are moved three hours. Instead of trying to approximate having the sun directly overhead at the same time every day (aka "noon"), which DST proponents seem to dislike, we can better approximate having the sun *rise* at the same time every day. (Averaging around 7:49am where I am.) Of course, the sun then won't set until 10:30 pm in the summer, but since school usually isn't in session during the summer, it'll be OK to let them stay up that late.

      --
      Nothing for 6-digit uids?
    2. Re:Let's change it again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My frat house is on double secret DST.

  60. a little bit ironic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so the big cost is on sysadmins who can't post on slashdot because they have to patch all the windows machines?

  61. I think by DaMattster · · Score: 1

    That most of us could have told George W. Bush that adjusting daylight savings time would not solve the energy problem or result in any savings and this should come as no surprise. I believe many of us saw right through this. After all, there are still twenty four hours in a day and by making it darker in the morning, you need more light to get ready so any savings are automatically offset. Rather than saving energy, energy usage patterns simply shifted. You want to talk energy savings, let's look at lessening greenhouse gases to keep our summers cooler so we don't have to run our air conditioners at peak load. Let's look at the promotion of more energy efficient building materials. I could go on and on. Instead of bull shitting around the issue, let's tackle it head on.

  62. Fix the problem, not the symptom by dazedNconfuzed · · Score: 0

    The difference is for those people--ie, most of us--who have fixed schedules like 8-5

    Then deal with YOUR schedlue - don't screw up mine. If it takes a literal act of Congress to mess up my schedule this way, then why don't you get an act of Congress that fixes YOUR problem WITHOUT messing up MINE?

    --
    Can we get a "-1 Wrong" moderation option?
    1. Re:Fix the problem, not the symptom by Moridineas · · Score: 1

      Yes, because of the tens of millions of wokers in the US, all of them get to arbitrarily decide their schedules. Likewise schools arbitrarily let students come in whenever they want.

      Besides which, how does a one hour naming shift "screw up" your schedule? I don't get that either. It's over in one day...

    2. Re:Fix the problem, not the symptom by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      It's over in one day... Actually, it's two days--one in the spring and one in the fall.

      The biggest problem I've had with daylight savings was train scheduling. I used to take the LIRR home when I worked in Manhattan and lived on Long Island. There was a 1:20AM train, a 2:20AM, a 3:50AM, and a 5:20AM train. Daylight savings would always confuse their schedules.

      In the spring time, you set your clock ahead. So 1AM jumps to 2AM. So what happens to the 1:20AM train? Now what would make sense, of course, is to just bag the 1:20AM train and run the 2:20AM, 3:50AM, and 5:20AM trains at their normal times. But one year I remember they ran a 2:20AM, 2:50AM, and then the 5:20AM train.

      In the fall, you set your clock back. So 2AM jumps back to 1AM. And the whole thing gets very confusing. They won't run two 1:20AM trains. So they run one 1:20AM train but don't run another 1:20AM train. Of course, you never know whether they'll run the 1:20AM EST or the 1:20AM EDT train so there's going to be a two hour delay no matter what.

      Usually the LIRR employees didn't know what was going to happen because when I came in, it was a different shift and they weren't going to be affected. Every year they seemed to try one thing or another. So even if, for example, they ran the train at 1:20AM EST last year, you couldn't count it being the same rule the next year. So twice a year, getting home was a real adventure.

      Of course, now I'm out in sunny Southern California and I drive everywhere.
    3. Re:Fix the problem, not the symptom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a democracy. You're in the minority, sucker.

  63. Re:there are other benifits to the new DST change. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How come the whole rest of the nation has to adjust their clocks just to get you to come in an hour earlier to work ?

  64. We have the government we deserve, I guess. by bitbucketeer · · Score: 1

    If the only way to get a farmer up at 4am is to tell him is 5am, then he's beyond the help of the Congress. Especially a Congress that calculates that businesses having more daylight requiring an additional hour of running central air conditioning is saving energy! Unbelievabla!!

    At least, if the law expires, my digital devices that "know" that DST is first Sunday of April to last Sunday of October will function correctly again.

    1. Re:We have the government we deserve, I guess. by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      DST was never for the benefit of farmers. I don't know where that urban legend cropped up, but farmers would get up at dawn even if you called it 3pm.

  65. Reminds me of Spaceballs by Akaihiryuu · · Score: 2, Funny

    "Do something!" (Col. Sanders on the intercom)

  66. Even with no energy savings, it's still a win by gujo-odori · · Score: 1

    Whether it saved any energy or not, That's six more weeks in the year when it will be light out when I (and a lot of the rest of you) go home from work.

    IMO, that alone makes it a win and makes it worth the patching efforts.

    And maybe, just maybe, it will teach people to not hardcode values like the start and end of DST, so that patches aren't required :)

  67. And all it cost me was... by Drakin020 · · Score: 0

    Being early for work one day....

    Yep, I have one of those clocks that set itself. When the power goes out and comes back on it knows that time it is.

    Yesterday morning my alarm went off, I got up and got ready and looked at my phone only to relise that my Alarm clock set itself to the old daylights savings time and my phone was correctly set. Yeah I was angry.

    --
    The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
  68. dark in the morning sucks by wilsonjd · · Score: 1

    All these people who say "stay on DST all year round" must not have to get up early in the morning. Dark at 6:00 am sucks much more than dark at 6:00 pm. It makes it very difficult to get out of bed.

  69. Time in general by smith6174 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think all of us can agree that in a perfect world, the rest of the goofballs out there would pay as much attention to this as we Slashdot readers have. I turn my lights on when I need to see in the dark. I go to my appointments on time, no matter what numbers the government or anyone else tells me that time is called. Also, what is the deal with time zones? I think this is the same issue. I feel the same when I wake up at 8am eastern time as when I wake up at 5am pacific time. Seriously, this is all stupid and old fashioned. I suggest that anyone who cares about this start using GMT exclusively in their dealings, especially if those dealings are as meaningless as mine.

  70. PG&E made some money from me by aegl · · Score: 2, Informative
    PG&E (Pacific Gas & Electric) whined to the public utilities commission that it would cost them $35M to go out and reprogram all the time-of-use meters. So the PUC let them stick with the first Sunday in April, last Sunday in October rules.

    For me this meant that the "part-peak" tariff ran from 6pm to 9pm, instead of from 5pm to 8pm for the past three weeks. This cost me two ways:

    1) Electricity generated by my solar PV system between 5pm and 6pm spun the meter backwards counting off-peak kWh instead of part-peak kWh.

    2) I use very little power from 5pm to 6pm (I'm generally not home from work), I definitely use more from 8pm to 9pm (I'm home, and it is dark so I have lights on). So moving the part-peak time an hour later meant that I bought more of the higher priced power than the cheaper off-peak power.

    -Tony

    1. Re:PG&E made some money from me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hmmm. i'd recommend putting your fridge or some other major appliance(s) on a timer. have it run 23 hours a day, with the missing hour being right before you transition to part-peak (door most likely will stay closed) or off-peak (minimizes cost). this way the fridge recovers using lower rates (or the laundry finishes or whatever). this should more than make up for running CFL an extra hour, plus you can keep screwing them even after the DST nonsense is over.

  71. Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by guanxi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Back in the day, when people's interactions were mostly local, time zones might have been harmless. But now, a large part of our population interacts across time zones every day. They're just a PITA -- time is an arbitrary number anyway, so who cares if the clock says 6pm or 6am when you wake up?

    It would take a little getting used to, but I bet everyone would adjust quickly and never go back. Imagine having every computer (and every log, timestamp, calendar, etc.) in the world on GMT. Imagine scheduling conference calls and not having someone confuse which time zone it was scheduled for.

    1. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by cpeterso · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Swatch Beats are the solution to time zones!

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swatch_Internet_Time

    2. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by StikyPad · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Basically because you'd still have to do the calculations, but you'd lost the convenience of having the same frame of reference in all locales, as 1200 would cease to be relevant. It would probably just make things more difficult.

      http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=22613 3&cid=18316935
      http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=158401 &cid=13272080

    3. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by TeknoHog · · Score: 2, Insightful

      time is an arbitrary number anyway, so who cares if the clock says 6pm or 6am when you wake up?

      I do care if a number contains alphabetical suffixes. If we rationalize on something like GMT, might as well use a proper 24-hour time.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    4. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by Talgrath · · Score: 1

      I've said this for a while now, it makes things much less confusing.

    5. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Time zones are important in the understanding of the movement of the sun and giving us that frame of reference, but this daylight savings time thing is a bunch of crap anyway. I miss the days when Indiana was still one of the sensible states that just ignored all of this junk, but its pretty hard to ignore daylight savings time when the financial centers of the US are all on DST.

    6. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by MMC+Monster · · Score: 1

      I'm sure having the world all on GMT would make a number of individuals SAD. :-(

      (Seasonal Affect Disorder)

      --
      Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
    7. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by Guppy06 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Back in the day, when people's interactions were mostly local, time zones might have been harmless."

      That's funny. Standard time and the resulting time zones came about because there were more interactions on a national and even global scale, thanks to railroads, telegraphs and radio. Keeping the time difference between two points an integer number of hours is far more preferable to what preceded it: everybody using local mean time for their own meridian. Would you like to keep track of the ~12 minute time difference between New Orleans and Chicago? The ~16 minute difference between San Francisco and Los Angeles? The ~12 minute difference between New York and Boston?

      "They're just a PITA -- time is an arbitrary number anyway, so who cares if the clock says 6pm or 6am when you wake up?"

      We're a diurnal species. If mechanical time did not approximate solar time to some degree, the former would be abandoned for the latter.

      "Imagine having every computer (and every log, timestamp, calendar, etc.) in the world on GMT. Imagine scheduling conference calls and not having someone confuse which time zone it was scheduled for."

      Imagine a world where not everybody's job involves timestamps, computer logs, or conference calls. Or, instead of imagining, experience reality a little instead.

      At any rate, if it works so well, use your life as an example and set all your personal timepieces to UTC.

    8. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      The very idea of AM and PM based off of the position of the sun in the sky, mid-day, and the middle of the day loses its original point of reference, so those are out the door too.

      Computers and logging can and do run off GMT with or without the idea of time zones.

    9. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Except, if I'm doing business with somebody at a significantly different longitude from my own, I still need to know the difference. Sure, I can say let's schedule the conference call for 2100 GMT - conveniently 16:00 MDT for me. But my collegue in Amsterdam will be a bit annoyed. So I would need a look-up table to see what his work hours typically are - I wonder what we'd call it? I got it - Time Zones!

      Most people will keep their work days roughly corrosponding to daylight hours whereever they are. Time zones are just a convenient way to keep track of what those hours are from place to place.

    10. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by AK+Marc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Basically because you'd still have to do the calculations, but you'd lost the convenience of having the same frame of reference in all locales, as 1200 would cease to be relevant. It would probably just make things more difficult.

      You don't have to do any calculations. Why would you ever deal with two time zones? I presume because you are in one and talking to someone in another, or you are traveling from one to another. If you are talking to someone, you ask them what their hours of operation are, and call between them. No calculations needed. It's really quite convenient. Hours of operation are different for every company, and they have them posted on websites and such, again, no calculations ever needed. If you are traveling, you never need to worry about a dateline or such. You never need to worry about setting a watch. You never need to worry about calculations to figure out what time back home people are sleeping. You do one and only one calculation, "what time do I wake up in the morning?" and that's not a calculation, but an answer you get handed to you when you get off the plane or ask a local. If you have business meetings, they are given to you, no calculations. If you are hungry, you eat. You try to go to bed 8 hours before the time to wake up.

      One clock eliminates almost all calculations. It is by far the most convenient way of handling time (except for the fact that almost nobody does it).

    11. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "Now that I moved to California, I should call my buddy in India. Hmm, what time can I call him so I don't wake him up in the middle of the night?"

    12. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by firewrought · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One clock eliminates almost all calculations. It is by far the most convenient way of handling time.
      Spoken like a true programmer! The "day"--the period of waking up, being active, going to sleep--is our one real biologically-rooted construct of time. You can't park midnight during the middle of lunch... the official calendar would not agree with people's conceptual calendars, and people would respond by developing new conventions that you'd then have to develop and re-gear your apps for and the calculations would be even messier and then you'd be back to square one.

      Eliminating DST alltogether now--that's a good idea.

      --
      -1, Too Many Layers Of Abstraction
    13. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by StikyPad · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You don't have to do any calculations. Why would you ever deal with two time zones?

      If you don't have to deal with multiple timezones then what the bloody hell do you care about what time it is in a different timezone?!?

      "what time do I wake up in the morning?" and that's not a calculation, but an answer you get handed to you when you get off the plane or ask a local.

      Nonsense. "The store closes at 5." "The store closes at 9." You know the former means "early evening" and the latter means "late evening" because we use time zones. Replace that with "The store closes at 0300," and suddenly you haven't a clue. Sure, you can figure out that local "noon" is 1800, therefore it closes at the equivelant of 9PM, but is that really easier?

      Yes, one of the side effects is that some locales border timezones and have to do a minor calculation to figure out what time the stores close in the adjacent timezone, but that wouldn't go away with everyone using UTC -- you'd still have to remember that it's an hour earlier/later.

      Don't get me wrong, DST is a ridiculous "solution," but discarding local time is equally ridiculous.

    14. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. "The store closes at 5." "The store closes at 9." You know the former means "early evening" and the latter means "late evening" because we use time zones. Replace that with "The store closes at 0300," and suddenly you haven't a clue. Sure, you can figure out that local "noon" is 1800, therefore it closes at the equivalent of 9PM, but is that really easier?

      If I get off work at 0400 and I know that's early evening, and the store closes at 0300, I know I can't make it. If it closes at 1800, then I know it closes just before I get to work so I could stop by on the way. It took no calculations for that. It's one of those things that you are arguing "it can't work because it's different." That is completely incorrect. It works great, despite being different. It would fail miserably because it isn't what people are used to. That is why it would never work, not because of the utility.

      Don't get me wrong, DST is a ridiculous "solution," but discarding local time is equally ridiculous.

      Discarding local time would greatly simplify communication across time zones, as well as travel. However, most people never travel outside the time zone they were born in. A large number never deal with someone more than one or 2 time zones away, where you don't even really have to pay attention to it. So it would give no benefit to most of the planet (and cause no harm, other than having to deal with different numbers for when to get to work and go home), but would greatly help those that travel often or deal with those in other time zones. Not that I think it would be accepted, but if it were universally used it would be better than what we have now.

    15. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by dbIII · · Score: 1

      So I would need a look-up table to see what his work hours typically are - I wonder what we'd call it? I got it - Time Zones!

      I used to have xearth as my background image which let me know where the sun is shining.

    16. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by dbIII · · Score: 1

      OMG, I live in Australia - and GMT is just so yesterday.

    17. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by toddestan · · Score: 1

      "Now that I moved to California, I should call my buddy in India. Hmm, what time can I call him so I don't wake him up in the middle of the night?"

      Ask him when he goes to bed, and call him before that time according to any clock anywhere. Now isn't that easier?

      Alternatively just use the fact that india is about 75 degrees east, and California is about 120 degrees west. That means they are roughly 195 degrees apart, and given the sun moves 15 degrees an hour, that puts him about 13 hours ahead. So call him in the middle of the night (in California). Longitude is more accurate than time zones anyway in terms of the placement of the sun in the sky.

    18. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by Ichijo · · Score: 1

      "The store closes at 5." "The store closes at 9." You know the former means "early evening" and the latter means "late evening" because we use time zones. Replace that with "The store closes at 0300," and suddenly you haven't a clue.

      I don't usually remember what time stores open and close, only that they tend to be open during daylight hours. I don't need a clock to tell me if it's daytime.

      --
      Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
    19. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by Ichijo · · Score: 1

      "Now that I moved to California, I should call my buddy in India. Hmm, what time can I call him so I don't wake him up in the middle of the night?"

      First, when you move to California, remember that it's positioned at UTC-8 (except during the DST months).

      What you would have to look up is where India is positioned. It's at UTC+5.5.

      Subtract the two, and you'll get the time zone difference. India is 5.5--8 or 13.5 hours ahead of California.

      Since you know from observation what time the sun rises and sets, what time you go to bed, etc. you just add 13.5 hours to figure out what time these events occur in India.

      --
      Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
    20. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by Nurgled · · Score: 1

      All of my personal timepieces are on UTC, but I'm cheating a bit since I'm in the UK. It's easy to handle the one hour time difference during daylight savings!

    21. Re:Eliminate DST ... and Time Zones too by rtaylor · · Score: 1

      So I would need a look-up table to see what his work hours typically are - I wonder what we'd call it?

      Typical work hours vary significantly within a single time-zone already. Some businesses close at 4pm or 6pm, and others at 9pm or later, some open at 7am and others open at 11am, and some even open at 5pm.

      You already need to know what his companies specific work hours typically are even if you're in the same time zone. The number of people working exactly 9am to 5pm is shrinking all the time. Flex time, shift work, etc. all threw out that assumption a long time ago.

      --
      Rod Taylor
  72. DST all the time? by DebbieM · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What if we just gave up standard time? Everyone likes the light. Few like the clock change hassle. Let's just stay in DST.

    1. Re:DST all the time? by AnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

      Everybody does like the light - some of us even like it in the morning!

  73. Wake up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DST is a gateway to Communism! Come on people!

  74. Get up earlier. by Myria · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you life depends on the sun, get up earlier.

    The government's laws should be about encouraging businesses to set working hours to match the sun, not changing fundamental measurement systems to trick people into getting up earlier.

    --
    "Screw Sun, cross-platform will never work. Let's move on and steal the Java language." - Visual J++ Product Manager
    1. Re:Get up earlier. by 2short · · Score: 1

      "If you life depends on the sun, get up earlier."

      I imagine people who's life depends on the sun ignore DST in terms of when to get up. DST is a crude adjustment, fine for people who kind of like an earlier day in the summer than the winter, but not for those who really depend on it.

      "The government's laws should be about encouraging businesses to set working hours to match the sun"

      An excellent idea, but wouldn't it be nice if businesses could make seasonal adjustments in their working hours in some organized fashion? Synchronized even?

      I don't know of anyone who is "tricked" by DST; it's not unpublicized, snuck past anyone, or, get this, required. You can set your watch to whatever you please; nobody will arrest you. If you need a fundamental measurement system, use UTC, or other non-adjusted time reference. If you want to adjust you schedule seasonally, while remaining syncronized with most of society, as is apropriate for almost all practical purposes, use DST.

  75. learning nothing from Y2K? by westlake · · Score: 1
    But the new DST is probably here to stay -- letting the bill expire would mean re-patching a lot of systems again next year. So much for saving energy.

    tell me again why you don't write a patch that makes it trivially easy to incorporate changes in local zone time?

    1. Re:learning nothing from Y2K? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      tell me again why you don't write a patch that makes it trivially easy to incorporate changes in local zone time?

      It already is trivially easy. That doesn't change the fact that it still has to be done, though, and your computer isn't going to magically change its own settings when Congress passes new laws. That's what the patches do.

  76. With "flex" time, this is senseless. by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Companies used to mostly work 9-5 (or 8-5).

    Now, our company works from 7am to 7pm (9 hour shifts w/ hour lunches).

    Basically, if you get up early, you take a 7am shift- if you get up late, you take a 10am shift.

    I don't see why they can't leave the clocks alone and places will just shift their hours if it matters.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  77. Foregone conclusion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The electric companies don't really want you to save energy...they would make less money. If DST actually saved any energy they would have lobbied against it.

  78. "Down with DST! Down with DST!" by D4C5CE · · Score: 1

    In a networked, computerized world where accurate, continuous time- and record-keeping is of the essence, it has become one of the worst ideas ever to mess around with the clocks twice a year (in particular now that everyone has about a dozen of them in various devices), at different dates and points in time all around the globe. High time indeed, literally, to put an end to this tremendous waste of resources (and everyone's time) that is Daylight Saving Time.

    1. Re:"Down with DST! Down with DST!" by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      What kind of a networked OS doesn't use GMT internally?

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    2. Re:"Down with DST! Down with DST!" by JonMartin · · Score: 1
      What kind of a networked OS doesn't use GMT internally?


      MS Windows.

      --
      Serve Gonk.
  79. LATE for work? by ranson · · Score: 1
    From the article:

    Oh, and if you're wondering why some of your colleagues showed up late for work yesterday, it's because many devices-even patched devices-shifted an hour ahead Sunday, when the change would have normally taken place. They actually would have shown up an hour early, no?
  80. Re:Purpose of Government by mikelieman · · Score: 1

    The purpose of Government is to hire Government Employees.

    Everything else is secondary.

    --
    Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
  81. Global warming by badc0ffee · · Score: 1

    This goes to prove man is causing global warming. All congress has to do is eliminate daylight savings and we can get back to scaring everyone with global cooling.

    --
    1011 1010 1101 1100 0000 1111 1111 1110 1110
  82. Obligatory joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the opposite of pro is con, what the opposite of Congress?

  83. end DST by mrtexe · · Score: 3, Informative
    A web site said it better than I could:

    STANDARDTIME.COM SAYS: If we are saving energy let's go year round with Daylight Savings Time. If we are not saving energy let's drop Daylight Savings Time!

    Enough of this daylight time, reset-the-clocks insanity. Just stop the madness.

    1. Re:end DST by geekoid · · Score: 1

      We did go year around in WWII.

      Of course our culture was a lot different, so it mayu not matter for now.

      As more and more people go to solar power and alternative energies, it will matter again.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:end DST by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      No! let's fire cannons in every street to wake people at dawn! http://webexhibits.org/daylightsaving/franklin3.ht ml
      --
      The Sun he gives light as soon as he rises: http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/01/slashdot-users -selling-solar.html

  84. Change your schedule, not my clock by KingSkippus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do you people have any clue what the concept of "noon" is supposed to be? In case you've forgotten, it's supposed to be the time of day when the sun is highest in the sky. It's supposed to be the time when there is as much daylight behind us as is in front of us.

    For practical purposes, this isn't exact, but we've done a pretty good job with splitting the world up into 24 time zones so that it's somewhat close.

    But not any more! No, now noon is just some arbitrary point during the day when we find it convenient to be. We want more time at the end of the day, so let's just move noon an hour ahead, right?

    WRONG! I have a better idea. Instead of dinking around with clocks and redefining what something means that has been around since the beginning of recorded time, why don't we just have businesses shift their hours around?

    Imagine how nice this would be. We never change our clocks. Twice a year, government changes its hours. The Post Office, for example, doesn't open at 8:00am during the summer, it opens at 7:00am, and it closes an hour earlier, too. Businesses that choose to do so follow suit and make sure its employees know when to show up. I suspect that almost all of them would, and probably most companies would have a policy that says something like, "When the government shifts its hours, we're shifting ours also."

    Everyone's happy. People get their extra hour at the end of the day. No one has to write stupid software patches to account for when DST is. Atlanta, Georgia is always GMT-5, never GMT-4 like it is now. People don't think Arizonans are weird because half the year they're on Mountain time and half the year they're on Pacific. If government wants to change its hours a few weeks earlier next year, there's no issue at all, they can just announce it a few months in advance, and when the time comes, do it.

    I'm sorry, but people who think that DST is a good thing are idiots. If you want to change your schedule, change your schedule. But leave my freakin' clock alone.

    1. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That would be a bad idea for anyone who depends on public transportation. Suddenly a lot of people who takes the first train or bus in the morning can't get to work on time.
      No you have to either move everything back one hour or nothing, and then you end up with daylight saving time anyway except instead of a simple change of clocks, you have to change every scedule in the country.
      Anyway some advantages of DST are more suptle, I know that the tourism industry here in Denmark likes it because it extend the season for outdoors atractions a month, because its light for a longer time in the evening.

    2. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by tylernt · · Score: 1

      Yes, yes, YES!

      Now, take that one step further and eliminate time zones, and we've created heaven on Earth.

      --
      DRM 'manages access' in the same way that a prison 'manages freedom'
    3. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Technician · · Score: 1

      Do you people have any clue what the concept of "noon" is supposed to be? In case you've forgotten, it's supposed to be the time of day when the sun is highest in the sky. It's supposed to be the time when there is as much daylight behind us as is in front of us.

      What you are referring to is now called local noon. A good GPS or sundial will povide that if you want it. Most portable GPS units will also provide local sunrise and sunset. Not all units provide local noon. Local noon can be easly calculated as the halfway point between local sunrise and local sunset.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    4. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Lord+Faust · · Score: 1

      I don't know how to express my agreement with you without referencing a car. Maybe it's like a truck; we're not talking about the Internet, after-all. At any rate; I hate the very notion of DST and your "why not change business hours" idea is probably the best I've heard.

    5. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by ryanov · · Score: 2, Informative

      Schedule change.

      Problem solved.

    6. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by xzqx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You think this would save stupid software patches? Think again. Lots of industries need software to know when the workday starts. How about the stock market, for example? Your scheme wouldn't have saved any more headache than moving DST. In fact, it might have caused some headaches, because now companies would need proprietary software instead of relying on libraries (granted, that isn't always the easiest option either).

    7. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by PasteEater · · Score: 3, Insightful

      why don't we just have businesses shift their hours around?

      Because it would be a much larger pain in the ass. So, some businesses follow government time, and some don't. Some shift their schedules, and some don't. How utterly ridiculous. Which option would your business take when half of the other businesses change their hours, and the others don't?

      DST is about simplicity: Ok everyone, change your clocks!

      The measurement of time is arbitrary in and of itself. By your rationale, we should adjust time daily so that noon is always the point in time when there is *exactly* half a day of sunlight left.

      I'm sorry, but people who think that DST is a good thing are idiots.

      Possibly, but anyone who endorses your plan doesn't exactly have both oars in the water either.

      --
      There are two kinds of people in the world: those with loaded guns, and those who dig.
    8. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by alexschmidt · · Score: 1

      You know, I honestly think you have the right idea.

    9. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is it any different when stores change their operating hours for the holidays?

    10. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by i_am_db · · Score: 1

      KingSkippus, are you from Indiana? I didn't give a rat's a$$ about DST until they made me start observing it last year.

    11. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      What about the lyrics of 9 to 5?

      I mean 8 to 4, for half the year, just sounds ridiculous.

    12. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by PasteEater · · Score: 1

      How is it any different when stores change their operating hours for the holidays?

      There is no difference. It screws everyone up then too.

      --
      There are two kinds of people in the world: those with loaded guns, and those who dig.
    13. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Imagine how nice this would be. We never change our clocks. Twice a year, government changes its hours. The Post Office, for example, doesn't open at 8:00am during the summer, it opens at 7:00am,and it closes an hour earlier, too. Businesses that choose to do so follow suit and make sure its employees know when to show up. I suspect that almost all of them would, and probably most companies would have a policy that says something like, "When the government shifts its hours, we're shifting ours also."

      Your simple-minded suggestion is almost laughable in its naivety. Just imagine, for example, Delta Airlines: "When the government shifts its hours, all our departure and arrival times will shift also". Sounds great, to a simpleton perhaps, but in reality the complexities of implementing such a schedule shift would far exceed the complexities introduced by DST. I can see it now, "Clearance this is Delta 775, IFR to Atlanta". "Ah, Delta 775, ah, we show you for 8 AM, not 7". "Ah, clearance, yeah, but, ah, at midnight we shifted our entire schedule by an hour".

      Will local and network TV schedules also shift by one hour twice per year? Do you have any idea of the complexities involved in that vs. just implementing DST? The examples are endless, but I'll stop here because your silly suggestion deserves no more.

    14. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by pla · · Score: 1

      Lots of industries need software to know when the workday starts.

      Whereas all computers need to know the time "now".

      "All" > "some". Change the damned schedules, leave my clock alone.

    15. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 1

      Have the transportation system run ONE extra run. That's it. Period. Better yet....why isn't public transportation 24/7 like the rest of the world?? Sure, those 3am runs would not have high ridership, but it would be there. DST changes are just more inane bullshit we have to put up with.

      --

      Gorkman

    16. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by sgurujee · · Score: 0

      Folks, you are complicating things un-necessarily.
      I feel that changing DST was a stupid thing to do and now since DoE has found that it has not saved much, imagine what would happen if we do not even change our business hours. I think that would ease up a few of the complications.
      We may still have different timezones in a country but no daylight savings. So, you would still be going to work from 9 to 5. its just that in winter 5 would be darker in the night. yes, but more energy consumption you say ? but that was what was proven wrong..... right? ;) and yes, no one plays with your freaking clock. All the businesses are in sync.

    17. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh please, that's far more effort than just changing a clock.

    18. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The DST fuss reflects the fact that people would prefer to define time relative to sunrise, not noon.

    19. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Grave · · Score: 1

      Because in "the rest of the world" (by which you I suspect you actually mean Europe and parts of Asia), public transportation is much more viable and widely used. In the US, public transportation only works for a small percentage of the populous because most people don't (or can't) live near their jobs, or the bus/subway routes don't align with their workplace or home.

      If so many changes are needed just to eliminate DST, why the bloody hell would you eliminate DST anyway? I mean seriously, if it cost untold millions for businesses to transition to changing DST by three weeks, what gain is there from eliminating it entirely? You'd now totally invalidate all that money that was just spent and cause everyone to have to do it all over again.

      For the love of God, leave DST as it is and don't change it again.

    20. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Grave · · Score: 1

      Stores change their hours by generally being open longer, not by shifting those hours forward or back.

      The only people it screws up are the employees, who then have to get up significantly earlier or get out of work significantly later.

    21. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by TheDormouse · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wow. I really don't think I could disagree with you more.

      Your world:
      1. Having to investigate when every business opens "this" time of the year. Since there's no standard, each business can decide when or if they want to change their schedule.
      2. Having to deal with public transportation schedules that may or may not change the same time that your place of business decides to change its schedule.
      3. Businesses having to maintain signage that says "Open 9am-11pm November-March, Open 8am-10pm April-October."
      4. Someone having to answer the phone constantly at your place of business asking "When are you open?" since they are less likely to memorize your business's flexible hours. (And don't think that an automated attendant that answers the phone with this information is going to prevent this question getting through to a human; it won't.)
      5. Getting to have noon magically when the sun is at the highest point in the sky. You know, if you happen to live on the meridian of your time zone where this actually occurs.

      Or the real world:
      1. Businesses keep reliable and memorizable hours.
      2. Public transportation schedules vacillate rarely.
      3. Businesses can keep their easy "Open 9am-11pm Every Day" signage.
      4. Still have to answer the phone at work explaining your hours, but probably to fewer people since your hours aren't confusing and are a tad easier to memorize.
      5. Noon is when it is. Doesn't matter since you can't reliably measure the time by looking at the sun most places in the world anyway.
      6. Throw around a frisbee an extra hour after work in the summer when the weather is nice.
      7. Change a dozen clocks and watches twice a year at a predetermined time that's widely publicized in the media, probably pre-marked on your calendar, and even changes automatically on machines with well-designed software.

      So, um, are all your clocks especially difficult to change or something? Or do you have like 40 thousand of them? Oh, you're a sysadmin who got bit by the DST change? Refer to the end of #7.

    22. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by digitrev · · Score: 1

      Because of places like Ottawa. The OC Transpo system, while very nice, is still lacking quite a bit. They barely run it out to some of the suburbs, like Stittsville, and they don't even bother giving anywhere west of that anything other than a rural express route. I know this is anecdotal, but there are plenty of places where public transit isn't viable.

      --
      Cynical Idealist
    23. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In most places public transportation has different schedules during the summer and winter, anyhow...

    24. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by dumeinst · · Score: 1

      stittsville is a a wanabe suburb :)

    25. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

      Whatever you're on, I want some.

      Seriously, we still haven't gotten companies to get over the "Close on Sunday" thing, just because of all the religious nuts. You think they are going to want to change their hours just to suit YOU, the employee?
      Mr CEO can leave whenever he feels like it. Why should he care if a bunch of grunts like you have to work til the sun goes down?

    26. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by OzoneLad · · Score: 1

      "Because of places like Ottawa. The OC Transpo system, while very nice, is still lacking quite a bit. They barely run it out to some of the suburbs, like Stittsville, and they don't even bother giving anywhere west of that anything other than a rural express route. I know this is anecdotal, but there are plenty of places where public transit isn't viable."

      Aren't there plans to implement suburb trains that run into Ottawa, like they have in Toronto and Montréal? The Ottawa train station is right smack on the Transitway, which makes getting around town from there trivial.

      -HT

    27. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hi KingSkippus,

      The solar analemma called. It said you suck.

    28. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Phisbut · · Score: 3, Insightful
      We don't seem to be living in the same "real world". What you described is an ideal real-world, not the real-real-world.

      1
      GP's world: Having to investigate when every business opens "this" time of the year. Since there's no standard, each business can decide when or if they want to change their schedule.
      Your real world: Businesses keep reliable and memorizable hours.
      My real world: Even with DST, businesses have no global standard. Some open at 7am, some at 8am, some at 9am, some at 10am. Some stores close at 5pm, some at 6pm, some at 9pm. Some of them are even open 24 hours a day. Heck, stores in the same mall can have different hours.

      2
      GP's world: Having to deal with public transportation schedules that may or may not change the same time that your place of business decides to change its schedule.
      Your real world: Public transportation schedules vacillate rarely.
      My real world: Even with DST, fewer people work in the summer time. A lot of people are on vacation. Many public transportation schedules reflect this by having a different "summer schedule".

      3
      GP's world: Businesses having to maintain signage that says "Open 9am-11pm November-March, Open 8am-10pm April-October."
      Your real world: Businesses can keep their easy "Open 9am-11pm Every Day" signage.
      My real world: Even with DST, businesses already maintain signage that says "Open 10am-5pm Monday-Wednesday, Open 10am-9pm Thursday-Friday, Open 9am-5pm Saturday, Open 11am-5pm Sunday.

      4
      GP's world: Someone having to answer the phone constantly at your place of business asking "When are you open?" since they are less likely to memorize your business's flexible hours. (And don't think that an automated attendant that answers the phone with this information is going to prevent this question getting through to a human; it won't.)
      Your real world: Still have to answer the phone at work explaining your hours, but probably to fewer people since your hours aren't confusing and are a tad easier to memorize.
      My real world: (See 1 and 3)

      --
      After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
      - The Tao of Programming
    29. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Avatar8 · · Score: 1
      I agree in principle.

      This would cause as many difficulties as the current clock changing system does just different issues. I think it would mainly boil down to businesses having "summer hours" and "winter hours," just two timesets that would shift in April & October (or March & November). After a year or two, people would adjust and would become accustomed to the shift.

    30. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by *weasel · · Score: 1

      How is it a larger pain in the ass?

      GPP's Suggestion: convey schedule information to your customers. (something you do anyway)
      DST: convey information to everyone and patch a big pile of systems, many legacy, following obscure regional rules.

      Which one's easier again?

      Sure, some businesses might not follow a federal hours change, but guess what? They don't right now. Some businesses still open at 9am. Many open at 8am. Would it really be that big a deal if some of them decided to open at 7am during the summer? If you do business with them, you know their operating hours. It's pretty straightforward.

      The only benefit to jacking with clocks is making sure everyone participates. But since we can see that the 'Energy Savings' are entirely theoretical, it isn't much of a justification.

      I'd support the GPP's suggestion for the simple fact that it doesn't involve legislators arbitrarily deciding to jack with clocks and doesn't require patching the infrastructure when they change their minds.

      --
      // "Can't clowns and pirates just -try- to get along?"
    31. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your answers to his post had nothing to do with what he said and even furthered his claims. Your 'real world' issues exist all the time, regardless of DST or businesses changing their schedules.

    32. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by digitrev · · Score: 1

      They do have plans to set extend the O-Train further north and south, as well as install an east-west route, but those plans got the boot when they realized that the current planned routes (going west from U of O to Bayview, then south to South Keys; just south of Orleans to Barrhaven) would barely be used. They still screw everyone who lives west of Kanata, east of Orleans, and south of Nepean.

      --
      Cynical Idealist
    33. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by TilJ · · Score: 1

      Exactly! The trick is to realize that the concept of "noon" already doesn't equate to the concept of "12:00" (unless you're located along a very particular axis per time zone). "Noon hour" could just as easily be 11:00-12:00.

      As long as they don't really match up anyway we might as well just shift hours in operation and leave the clocks alone.

      --
      "The purpose of argument is to change the nature of truth." -- Bene Gesserit Precept
    34. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by 2short · · Score: 1


      "As long as they don't really match up anyway we might as well just shift hours in operation and leave the clocks alone."

      Why would that be better? Either way we change what time we do things (which is good), but by changing the clocks we do it in a synchronized manner.

    35. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      GPP's Suggestion: convey schedule information to your customers. (something you do anyway)
      DST: convey information to everyone and patch a big pile of systems, many legacy, following obscure regional rules.


      Which one's easier again?


      Oh, very very easy question to answer. DST by a mile is the easier change.

    36. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by DanQuixote · · Score: 1


      Fact: Businesses DO shift their hours around, there is a significant percentage (retail shops particularly) that have different winter and summer hours. They have already printed these times on their doors and brochures.

      Fact: Time measurement is an extremely simple concept that has been brutally "complexified" through feature creep across several centuries. (time zones off by 15 minutes???)

      Fact: People change their schedules all the time anyway.

      Fact: DST is NOT about simplicity, it's a pain in the ass that comes of politicians attempting to force behaviors.

      Fact: You have underestimated the power of not having both oars in the water. :)

      At the end of the day (pun intended), all we really need the clocks to do is to count seconds accurately. Local interpretation of what the time means will ALWAYS be a necessary task. When I call London from Seattle, I know that they are 7 hours ahead thanks to time zones. But, that doesn't guarantee either that the business is open, or that the person I'm calling is at their desk!

      Let's make a simple thing simple again and set ALL the clocks to Greenwich Meridian Time. Then us Seattle-ites will just set our alarms for 12:30 (GMT) and go to work at 13:30 when the sun is just coming up. No problem! That gets rid of the anti-meridian/post-meridian thing at the same time, that noon issue is just plain overrated.

      --
      "We think people rightly feel that once they buy something, it stays bought," --Suw Charman, Open Rights Grp
    37. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by PasteEater · · Score: 1

      All good points, but it still doesn't change the fact that when businesses change their hours, it screws me up.

      I can't count how many times I've arrived at a store (restaurant, etc.) only to find that they have changed their hours, and are no longer open. Imagine this on a grand scale, with the added variable of "government time".

      I don't really see how DST is a pain in the ass. Move clock forward. Done. It's always done on a Sunday, so if you forget, you are less likely to miss something important.

      I like the extra daylight time at the end of the day. (In an earlier article posted on Slashdot, many people were ADAMANT about explaining that we don't actually get more daylight. Well no shit.) The winter is tough, because it's easy to not see daylight if you work long hours. I would much prefer to have less daylight in the morning and more in the evening when I can enjoy it.

      Frankly, I think that we should be on DST year round. It would mean that the sun wouldn't rise until 9am, but that doesn't bother me one bit.

      --
      There are two kinds of people in the world: those with loaded guns, and those who dig.
    38. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by TheDormouse · · Score: 1

      My real world: Even with DST, businesses have no global standard. Some open at 7am, some at 8am, some at 9am, some at 10am. Some stores close at 5pm, some at 6pm, some at 9pm. Some of them are even open 24 hours a day. Heck, stores in the same mall can have different hours.

      Yes, but Home Depot keeps a regular schedule. Target keeps a regular schedule. If you're doing early morning shopping, you might remember "Target opens at 9 today; I should savor this breakfast for another hour before heading out." Particularly in the spring and fall, you apparantly want the hassle of remembering "wait, does Target open at 8 or 9?" Sure different businesses keep different schedules but, by and large, most keep consistent schedules year round. And thus, it's easy to remember when the businesses you frequent are open.

      My real world: Even with DST, fewer people work in the summer time. A lot of people are on vacation. Many public transportation schedules reflect this by having a different "summer schedule".

      But at least summer schedules only change at predetermined points of the year. You don't have to worry about the aforementioned problem of the bus schedule offsetting an hour starting a different week from your place of business.

      My real world: Even with DST, businesses already maintain signage that says "Open 10am-5pm Monday-Wednesday, Open 10am-9pm Thursday-Friday, Open 9am-5pm Saturday, Open 11am-5pm Sunday.

      Sure they do. And wouldn't it be great if everyone's hours had to be posted in 3-column tabular format?!

      HOURS Nov-Mar Apr-Oct
      Mon 10am-5pm 09am-4pm
      Tue 10am-5pm 09am-4pm
      Wed 10am-5pm 09am-4pm
      Thu 10am-9pm 09am-8pm
      Fri 10am-9pm 09am-8pm
      Sat 09am-5pm 08am-4pm
      Sun 11am-5pm 10am-4pm

      Makes it especially easy to read from the street! And just wait until you hear the recording when you call them on the phone!

      If you think DST should be discontinued for it's own sake, that's fine; that has a whole different set of arguments. But to suggest that businesses and schools should change their operating hours during the year to achieve the same effect as DST and claim it would be no more inconvenient, that's just ridiculous.

    39. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pretty sure you wouldn't enjoy every company/shop you work with phone twice a year just to tell you their working hours. Patching may be *your* problem so it is natural you'd like to get rid of it. But compared to the alternative, it is no big deal even for admins and clock shops.

    40. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by vraddict · · Score: 1

      The measurement of time is arbitrary in and of itself. By your rationale, we should adjust time daily so that noon is always the point in time when there is *exactly* half a day of sunlight left.

      It's not noon that is constantly changing. It is the "time" of the sunrise and sunset that changes as the earth orbits around the sun. Noon should always be noon.

    41. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by *weasel · · Score: 1

      Most of the places I work with already have varying schedules.
      Summer schedules, holiday schedules, weekend hours, time-zone changes in general, holidays, international holidays, etc.

      Somehow, I manage just fine without projecting my schedule onto a nation with the stroke of a pen.

      --
      // "Can't clowns and pirates just -try- to get along?"
    42. Re:Change your schedule, not my clock by ryanov · · Score: 1

      That's actually not necessarily true. It is very much an attitude thing in my part of the country. I live just 20 mins outside of NY (by mass transit), or a few miles as the crow flies. I live basically at the intersection of every bus route that runs through this area, and a block from the train station, and I can get just about anywhere in NJ without a major hassle. That said, most people in my building appear to drive to work (even though parking a car costs over $150 a month), many of them along bus routes.

      People don't want to ride mass transit. I don't know why that is, but I've just about given up giving a shit.

  85. Why time zones at all? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With the world as interconnected as it is these days, I'm find it odd that we haven't dumped time zones and gone to planetary UTC. Who cares if I happen to start my work day and 00:00 and go until 09:00. At least I know that when I'm calling Sven up at 03:30, 2007-04-11, it's 03:30, 2007-04-11.

    1. Re:Why time zones at all? by belg4mit · · Score: 1

      So what if you're calling Sven at 3:30 on Bob-gives-a-fuck-what-day?
      You still need some way of knowing if he's likely in bed, at work, or the pub.
      That is, you need to know the *local(~solar)time*

      --
      Were that I say, pancakes?
  86. Dude, that's not a DST problem by tacokill · · Score: 1

    Hey, I don't want to be a douche here but your problem is not with Daylight savings. Your problem is with communication. And yes, sometimes a lack of communcation can be expensive.

    You aren't, by chance, in IT consulting are you? :)

    1. Re:Dude, that's not a DST problem by CrazyTalk · · Score: 1

      Actually no, but I hire IT consultants, and those are the ones that screwed up (in spite of being told of the time change)

    2. Re:Dude, that's not a DST problem by Copid · · Score: 1

      Hey, I don't want to be a douche here but your problem is not with Daylight savings. Your problem is with communication. And yes, sometimes a lack of communcation can be expensive.
      So adding yet another variable into the equation has nothing to do with the problem? Having to keep track of arbitrarily shifting clocks is an expense. Yes, it can be dealt with, but that doesn't mean it's not a problem. If I take a swing at you and hit you in the face, at least a teensy weensy bit of the blame should fall on me for causing the problem, not just on you for not being quick enough.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  87. Not statistically significant by winkydink · · Score: 4, Funny

    Everybody knows that this was an unusually bright winter. I wonder why you never hear about the problem with Global Brightening?

    --

    "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    1. Re:Not statistically significant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Because the lightbulb cartels are suppressing the research.

    2. Re:Not statistically significant by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      I wonder why you never hear about the problem with Global Brightening?
      Hmm, I wonder...
      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    3. Re:Not statistically significant by winkydink · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the you can read as far as the third sentence of the next Wikipedia article you quote?

      "This trend may have reversed during the past decade."

      Besides, it was a joke.

      --

      "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    4. Re:Not statistically significant by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      No I didn't, and yes I realised.

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  88. Congress member names by michaelmalak · · Score: 3, Informative
    The mass media seem to omit the names of the Congress members responsible for this fiasco. Here are the names from their own boastful press relese:
    • Fred Upton (R-MI)
    • Ed Markey (D-MA)
    1. Re:Congress member names by ziggr · · Score: 1

      Or check on how your own elected official represented you: http://clerk.house.gov/evs/2005/roll445.xml

      I'm proud to say my own representative Barbara Lee voted against this distraction.

    2. Re:Congress member names by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 1

      Fiasco? Nobody I know as negatively effected by this. I am thankful for the extra light after work.

      --
      Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!

      http://financialpetition.org/
  89. Re:Don't foget about October.... (for the children by BridgeBum · · Score: 1

    Many towns don't even allow that now. They have curfews imposed to keep kids in after it's dark. I agree with you, it defeats the whole purpose of Halloween. But since when has "THINK OF THE CHILDREN!!!!" logic ever been rational?

    --
    My UID is the product of 2 primes.
  90. Get rid of the change! by shaitand · · Score: 1

    Yes lots of systems were patched, many more devices could not be patched. If we are going to make a change then we should abolish DST altogether. Oh my, the sun sets and rises at different times during different seasons. Man could never cope without changing the clocks to a false time that feels a little better! If we aren't doing that, then it would make sense to change it back. All the systems that could be patched before can be patched back and the devices that could not be patched will be correct again.

  91. It wasted power on my end by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Had to spend three weeks resetting the Time on my WinXP box - which would "reset" itself to the "correct" (incorrect) time every time Windows updated something - causing me to leave an hour late a few nites during that time.

    Good thing I had some large manual clocks to rely on.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    1. Re:It wasted power on my end by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 2, Informative

      So why didnt you disable the "Windows Time" service? MS put a NTP client with a ntp.microsoft.com address. I'd rather have a NTP server of my own and it only pulling time off of a level 2 NTP server.

      That would make my server a NTP level 3 and my clients level 4. 4 Deviations of time off of nasa... Not too shabby.

      --
  92. Daylight Saving Mystery by BillGatesLoveChild · · Score: 4, Funny

    That's right. The Sun burned up just as much fuel after daylight savings was introduced as it did before. Lawmakers are baffled.

  93. But the new DST is probably here to stay :) by dindi · · Score: 1

    At least I do not have to apply the DST changes on 5 different java versions from different vendors to all those hundreds of Unix machines :)

    I read somewhere, that the idea was based on a 30 year old study, which based evening and morning household use on toasters and TVs, and other appliances, that have little to do with today's machines' consumption, and I am sure it did not calculate with 1-2 pcs and 2-5 chargers on every desk at the workplace.
    Most importantly they did not look at the fact how lighting changed and how many companies use nowadays motion sensors and fluorescent lighting, and build with more glass, that reduces ligh use even at darker hours ....

    but hey ... at least the patches are done :) IT made money on giving support on that. The world did not become a better place, but IT had $$ for a few extra beers ...

  94. Re: by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It would be better to switch back. Why? Because there are unfixed errors in a lot of software that are still causing problems. For the fixed bugs, well, those can be "unfixed" if they were fixed in the first place. It isn't too late to switch back.

  95. I say, change it back to the old rules. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who cares if that means more patching? For all the crap that will have to be patched (again), there's tons of consumer electronic devices out there (not to mention unsupported-but-still-viable software) that was never going to be patched and would thus be inaccurate 4 weeks out of the year for the rest of its lifespan.

    IMHO only positive to come out of this is that hopefully future systems will be designed to more easily change such rules. I'm surprised that such boneheaded decisions were made to hard-code the DST rules and make it such an utter fucking hassle to change them. Did we learn nothing from Y2K?

  96. Our patching is done as well. by FatSean · · Score: 1

    My company, however, has over 350,000 employees world-wide. I hate to sound cliche, but your business needs to embrace IT infrastructure as an asset, not an expense! Unfortunately, I have no advice on how to convince them of this idea.

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:Our patching is done as well. by ryanov · · Score: 4, Funny

      How many bullshit animated cursor exploits have I patched my Solaris machines for this year?

    2. Re:Our patching is done as well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Your Unix admins most be total idiots or you are just full of shit. I lean more toward the you are full of shit.

    3. Re:Our patching is done as well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      How many bullshit telnet root exploits have you patched your Solaris machines for this year?

    4. Re:Our patching is done as well. by totally+bogus+dude · · Score: 3, Informative

      Err.. telnet? In 2007? I think you need to go back to your cave.

    5. Re:Our patching is done as well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Hopefully nobody is actually using telnet on an unsecured network...
      but if they are they'd better patch Solaris 10.
      http://sunsolve.sun.com/search/document.do?assetke y=1-26-102802-1

      Let me check the year, oh yeah, 2007!

    6. Re:Our patching is done as well. by ryanov · · Score: 1

      Who runs telnetd anyway?

    7. Re:Our patching is done as well. by MyOtherUIDis3digits · · Score: 1

      Amen. We don't have as large an infrastructure, but our 13,000 desktops and 2,000 Windows servers were patched in one night without issue, as usual. The Unix SAs, however, struggled for weeks...as usual. I often feel sorry for them, then I realize they bring it on themselves by refusing to enter the 20th century, let alone the 21st.

      Dude, this would really piss me off if it wasn't so frickin funny! Come 2am/3am that morning, we had 3 AIX admins going, "ho-hum, everything changed properly", while 2 dozen Wintel admins where running around trying to figure out why a significant portion of the patched servers didn't change, and manually setting the time on systems that couldn't be patched.

      All fanboism aside, I honestly can't understand using Windows for any type of server. Painting flames on the side of a 74 Pinto doesn't make it a race car, and slapping half-assed security and multi-user capability on a desktop OS doesn't make it a server OS.

      --
      Ignore anything I said above, I actually agree with everything you believe - mod accordingly.
    8. Re:Our patching is done as well. by luker0 · · Score: 1

      Funny that, because "patching" for DST involved downloading one file to update. That's it, no installers, no reboots. Just update a time zone file. Should be that easy on Windows too, but it's not. Can't complain though, Microsoft high administration cost keeps me employed.

    9. Re:Our patching is done as well. by The+Spoonman · · Score: 1

      All fanboism aside, I honestly can't understand using Windows for any type of server. Painting flames on the side of a 74 Pinto doesn't make it a race car, and slapping half-assed security and multi-user capability on a desktop OS doesn't make it a server OS.

      Yes, and if you have incompetent morons in your pit crew, as you obviously do, it doesn't matter what you drive since they'll keep forgetting to put the tires back on. On the other hand, we're walking Unix servers out the door every day and replacing them with Windows boxes. I think it has something to do with management liking the 24/7 availability on the Tier 1 apps that Unix can no longer provide....

      --
      Which is more painful? Going to work or gouging your eye out with a spoon? Find out!
      http://www.workorspoon.com
    10. Re:Our patching is done as well. by The+Spoonman · · Score: 1

      No, it's your incompetence that causes the high administration costs. We have 16 people to manage 15,000 Windows boxes and 137 Unix twits to manage about 800 boxes. Who's got the higher cost of ownership again?

      --
      Which is more painful? Going to work or gouging your eye out with a spoon? Find out!
      http://www.workorspoon.com
    11. Re:Our patching is done as well. by MyOtherUIDis3digits · · Score: 1

      I can't comment on the competency of our Win Admins as I am definitely not one myself. But I do read several trade publications and websites, and it seems the problems they constantly deal with are not uncommon.

      ...we're walking Unix servers out the door every day and replacing them with Windows boxes. I think it has something to do with management liking the 24/7 availability on the Tier 1 apps that Unix can no longer provide....

      I have no reason to doubt what you say, and maybe it's just that my 20 years in IT have been atypical, but I am having a hard time wrapping my mind around that concept.

      --
      Ignore anything I said above, I actually agree with everything you believe - mod accordingly.
    12. Re:Our patching is done as well. by The+Spoonman · · Score: 1

      I can't comment on the competency of our Win Admins as I am definitely not one myself. But I do read several trade publications and websites, and it seems the problems they constantly deal with are not uncommon.

      I would disagree...to a point. They're common for magazine writers and the general slashdot crowd, however, those of us in the know know better. Is there a learning curve with Windows? Certainly, and it's much higher than Unix, but the initial slopes are exactly the same. What steps do you take to secure a Unix box? Believe it or not, they're exactly the same on a Windows box. The problem is most Unix admins choose to look solely at the GUI and say "Fah! Fisher Price!" without bothering to realize there's a lot more to it than first glance.

      I have no reason to doubt what you say, and maybe it's just that my 20 years in IT have been atypical, but I am having a hard time wrapping my mind around that concept

      No, they haven't. I my 20+ years, I've dealt with a fair amount of incompetence. It's been growing in recent years, though, and it's coming from both fronts. The new people coming in barely know anything about Windows beyond what they got from their certifications classes, and the older folks are still mired in "this is the way we've always done things". I like to take the middle ground and go with what works...until something better comes along, and there's always something better coming along. Right now, in terms of usability AND performance, security and reliability, Windows is far ahead in the race with Unix starting to slog quickly behind in the last three (from an end-user perspective, it never had the first). But, those only come with experience and no one wants to put the time in to do things right anymore. Shame...

      I tell 'em all, young and old, the same thing: imagine you're a tech at Microsoft and you've just been called up to Bill's office. Tell me how long you'll be employed if you try to use one of those "Bleh, that's just Windows!" type lines...once they learn to remove that hammer from their toolboxes, the rest comes easy.

      --
      Which is more painful? Going to work or gouging your eye out with a spoon? Find out!
      http://www.workorspoon.com
    13. Re:Our patching is done as well. by MyOtherUIDis3digits · · Score: 1

      Right now, in terms of usability AND performance, security and reliability, Windows is far ahead in the race with Unix starting to slog quickly behind in the last three (from an end-user perspective, it never had the first).

      Ok, I'm being punk'd, right? All those zero-day exploits, known vulnerabilities that go unpatched for months, ActiveX - you're are just messing with me, right? When you say security (as I concede usability, and you will never convince me on performance or reliability), you must be talking about several layers of third-party apps to buttress the built-in "protection" of Windows.

      Maybe I just fall into your category of 'older folks ... still mired in "this is the way we've always done things"', but I've never heard or read of someone seriously making this argument for Windows as a server OS.

      --
      Ignore anything I said above, I actually agree with everything you believe - mod accordingly.
    14. Re:Our patching is done as well. by The+Spoonman · · Score: 1

      Ok, I'm being punk'd, right? All those zero-day exploits, known vulnerabilities that go unpatched for months, ActiveX - you're are just messing with me, right? When you say security (as I concede usability, and you will never convince me on performance or reliability), you must be talking about several layers of third-party apps to buttress the built-in "protection" of Windows.

      Since your Windows experience is second-hand, I'll let you in on the big secret: there's a simple security checklist the Microsoft has published for years. Follow those 20-25 simple recommendations (such as securing your file system, disable unnecessary services, use privilege separation...sound familiar??) and about 99% of those issues can't affect you. Period. My favorite example is CodeRed from a few years back. In order to be affected by that, you'd have to 1) install IPP, which no one used 2) allow your web service write access to 3) known locations on the drive that 4) contained "sample" scripts. If any one of the basic security best practices had been followed, the server wouldn't have be compromised by that attack. Who's at fault for that failing, the OS or the "admin"? Solaris was also vulnerable to CodeRed, but didn't get hit as bad. Why? 'Cause the Unix guys secure their boxes. Whenever we get a patch notice from MS, we review the impact and determine if there's a need. More often than not, even the security updates labeled "critical" get pushed back into the 6-week patch cycle and the only reason we keep that schedule is to make sure the supporties remember there's a maintenance window. :) In the two and a half years at this company, I can only think of one, maybe two, times we've pushed out a patch the day it was released.

      Maybe I just fall into your category of 'older folks ... still mired in "this is the way we've always done things"', but I've never heard or read of someone seriously making this argument for Windows as a server OS.

      Considering how often they fall prey to these kinds of issues, perhaps you should revisit your support of their opinions? :)

      --
      Which is more painful? Going to work or gouging your eye out with a spoon? Find out!
      http://www.workorspoon.com
  97. Re:Here's the proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The DST change also gave oil companies a boost by increasing the forcasted "demand" for gas which then enabled them to increase the price of the "supply". I love it when a plan comes together!

  98. News Flash! by TheSync · · Score: 1

    "Congress passes law that claims to do something, but not only doesn't do what it sets out to do, it actually makes things worse."

    Hmm...War on Drugs, minimum wage, DST change, need I go on?

    1. Re:News Flash! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      For every one you name, there are a hundred that did well.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  99. Cost a shitload if you ask me! by shagymoe · · Score: 1

    I'd wager hundreds of millions of dollars were spent on patching computers and fixing code. So Fing stupid.

  100. Re:Don't foget about October.... (for the children by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yeah, the widening of the DST period at its other endpoint, in October, was only done to make daylight trick-or-treating possible. Search the congressional record for it. They changed it by one week just to get Halloween in there. American candy makers had been lobbying for the change for decades.

    So stupid. I was never molested when trick-or-treating as a child because the predators couldn't see me in the dark.

  101. Should turn clocks the OTHER way. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

    I don't [like the extra daylight]. In fact, I fucking hate it. The sun is trying to kill me, and giving it any more opportunities to do that doesn't make me any happier.

    I'm with you.

    In the summer we already have extra sunlight. Why try to "save" more? What we're short of is night time - sunless recreation time. That puts a crimp on "night people" like me, and "daylight savings time" steals ANOTHER hour of the scarce resource.

    It seems to me that the institution of permanent DST was the major factor in the demise of the drive in theaters, just for starters. (But DST is really handy for crooks because it results in far fewer people being alert when many of them ply their trades.)

    So IMHO what we need to do is turn the clocks BACK during the summer, to get access to more of the scarce and valuable dark hours.

    I call it "Nightlife Savings Time".

    = = = =

    Take Back the Night!

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re:Should turn clocks the OTHER way. by Rakarra · · Score: 1
      It seems to me that the institution of permanent DST was the major factor in the demise of the drive in theaters, just for starters.

      Mmm, I often thought that it likely the really, really poor quality sound you'll find in drive-ins especially as movies got better (surround) sound, the idiots who find the need to start up their cars in the middle of the movie, and the low-density space requirements. When it comes to the drive-in, I think they mostly disappeared for many of the same reasons small theaters disappeared. And you can't really have a drive-in multiplex.

    2. Re:Should turn clocks the OTHER way. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      I often thought that it likely the really, really poor quality sound you'll find in drive-ins

      Near the end of the era they were also using carrier-current FM transmission of the sound. Park next to the post with the crummy speaker and turn on your car's sound system: Bingo! Dolby stereo HiFi. (Nowadays they could also be sending surround sound.)

      And you can't really have a drive-in multiplex.

      As of maybe a year ago there was one of those operating near Sacremento. Four screens on four sides of the lot, with parking spaces facing each, projector house and concession stand in the middle.

      Drive in theaters would still be viable if there was enough people-awake dark time during decent weather for people to use them. As it is they're mostly gone, and the few that continue are mainly in places that have warm winters.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    3. Re:Should turn clocks the OTHER way. by Rakarra · · Score: 1
      Near the end of the era they were also using carrier-current FM transmission of the sound.

      What... you mean have the movie audio transmitted where anyone within range could -steal- the soundtrack?

      Given the climate of the movie industry today (or the early 80s for that matter), I think the studios weren't sad to let the drive-ins fade away to let the multiplexes take over. It certainly benefitted their bottom line.

      As of maybe a year ago there was one of those operating near Sacremento. Four screens on four sides of the lot, with parking spaces facing each, projector house and concession stand in the middle.

      I'm surprised I hadn't heard of it given I spent 6 years in Davis. Then again, I didn't have a car then, so I probably wouldn't have cared.

      But really, how many people could each screen support? Compare that to the number of people a sit-down theater can display to. Why did smaller theaters die while the multiplexes thrived? I think many of those reasons can be applied to the drive-ins.

  102. On the Flip Side by camperdave · · Score: 3, Informative

    That's six more weeks in the year when it will be light out when I (and a lot of the rest of you) go home from work.

    On the flip side, however, it means that there's six more weeks in the year when it is still dark when we go to work... the other side of the coin.

    --
    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    1. Re:On the Flip Side by gujo-odori · · Score: 1

      Not if you go to work late enough :)

  103. The Brinks Alarm commercials have me scared... by FatSean · · Score: 1

    ...shit man, everything is about fear these days. Fear sells and we're all buying. Why do you think the gun people always use the protection aspect to sell their position? Not everyone enjoys firing a weapon for the sake of the skill, but everyone would like to feel a little more secure.

    --
    Blar.
  104. Devils Advocate by dlhm · · Score: 1

    I'm going to play devils advocate and ask some questions.. In this article did he quote any sources that can be verified? Why did he quote only 2 energy companies that said it had no impact. Are they the know-it-all's on the subject? Why does he quote the same references his own article references ? What was the impact? Is he saying there is absolutly no measureable impact? He says the DOE doesn't think it will make an impact. Is he referencing this article? http://www.eere.energy.gov/consumer/news_detail.cf m/news_id=10625 I'm not saying he is incorrect, I just think his article is very poorly researched.. ..just my 2 cents

    --
    Ad eundum quo nemo ante iit!
  105. You beat the shit out that strawman! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a hell of a lot more to it than just saving power. I for one welcome the extra sunlight when I can use it, after work, and what do I care if it is dark when I go to work? But you just take your crankiness and build up a suitable strawman to pound the stuffing out of so you feel better.

    Sunlight in the morning is a waste except to the few freaks of nature known as 'morning people'.

  106. And if... by Shaltenn · · Score: 1

    And if they factor in the time spent by coders (which turns into money for companies) I bet you we're in the red because of the change.

    Good grief.

    --
    If you were offended by anything I said... No, I'm not sorry. Please lighten up.
  107. Extrapolating from Chef Boyardee is not allowed. by Medievalist · · Score: 2, Funny

    You have to measure the savings by looking at the sales of candles, the same way Ben Franklin did.

    After all, if it was good enough for the Founding Fathers it's good enough for patriotic Americans, eh? Anybody that says otherwise is clearly a liberal who is soft on terrorism and hates America.

  108. AC useage durring summer months. by cheetah · · Score: 1

    I didn't think it would change useage right now. But what about during the summer months. I have always thought that people getting home during the hotter part of the day would lead to increased useage from AC units. I have yet to see a study that used real world information to prove or dis-prove energy savings for Daylight Savings Time.

    1. Re:AC useage durring summer months. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the other variable is the thermal mass of the dwelling. A small, single-story (and poorly insulated) house will cool off quickly once the sun goes down so you'd save money. But a two-level tract house on a concrete slab has so much stored heat in the walls and floor that it levels out over a 24 hour period.

      We'd be better off pushing to make all dwellings properly insulated, rather than trying to time when the energy is going to leak out...

  109. REALLY Saving Energy by dasunst3r · · Score: 1

    I wonder how much energy was consumed coming up with stupid bills like these and the war we have going on in the Middle East. I'm sure that energy could be used elsewhere...

    1. Re:REALLY Saving Energy by BCW2 · · Score: 1

      If you could generate electricity from hot air, the Capitol could power the country. Hot air is the main product of Washington DC. The only other product is and endless amount of paper that means nothing.

      Political party is irrelevant, all politicians are self-serving crooks. If you are not in their tax bracket, you have NO representation!

      --
      Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  110. Fixed once, should have been fixed twice by Easy2RememberNick · · Score: 1

    "Oh, and if you're wondering why some of your colleagues showed up late for work yesterday, it's because many devices-even patched devices-shifted an hour ahead Sunday, when the change would have normally taken place."

      That's what happened where I work, the systems were patched for the time change on the new date, things were going smoothly but then the time changed again on the usual date and then everything was an hour ahead, it was patched for that!

      As for the saved power, I don't know but it cost a lot of sweat an aggravation where I work. People here, South Eastern Canada, did seem to like the change of having more light in the evening when they got off work.

  111. Remember this was George Bush's act. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This act was created by George Bush and friends and the republican congress passed it to get George's friends to drill for oil in Alaska so they pocket our money. The DST change is like a 1" band-aid over a missing limb. Changing DST worked 20 years ago and before because our workday was from about 8AM to about 6PM but now with an global economy we have a 24 workday so this DST change doesn't work now. Also 20 years ago who ever hear of buying a SUV or big truck except those really needed it. Most of us 20 years ago had smaller cars so now much of the energy we consume now are for powering these Exxon Valdez's that we so often see on the road now.
    We, in the United States of American, collectively need to reduce our energy use or our children will left with an pretty ugly world.

  112. Good for the wrong recent (and bad for others) by phorm · · Score: 1

    As an IT worker, my opinion the DST change was poorly brought-about and thought-up. It basically served a political agenda as well as a restricted economical one.

    However, as a regular-workday employee (8-4), after getting over the technical headaches and early wake-up time, I quite enjoyed my extra little bit of sunlight after work. Personally, I'd rather that DST gets abolished altogether, the best way to do so being to just leave the damn clock where it is now.

    1. Re:Good for the wrong recent (and bad for others) by geekoid · · Score: 1

      WTF dies being an IT worker have to do with it?

      To become an IT worker did you need to study macro economics, cultural traits, and coutry wide energy usage?

      IF you leave it where it is now, in the winter it will be dark until 9AM. That means MORE energy is used in the winter.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Good for the wrong recent (and bad for others) by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1

      ---That means MORE energy is used in the winter.

      That's always been true. It's cheaper to remove 20F from a volume than it is to heat it up by 50F (assuming 80F in house at summer and 70F in house at winter).

      How exactly does waking up at a different time "means MORE energy" consumed?

      --
  113. Re: by mark-t · · Score: 1

    Indeed... and most of the framework for implementing such a change is ready-to-go, since a major DST change has already been done once.

  114. WWVB broadcasts a DST flag in their time by Radon360 · · Score: 1

    Sounds to me that the designers of your clock were about a short-sighted as those who decided that using two digits to define a year was sound implementation.

    If you look at the WWVB signal description NIST encodes a DST signal within the time information. Thus, if the clock you own had been designed properly to derive DST from the radio signal, rather than using an internal calendar, it would have changed just fine (provided that it had a good signal at the time).

    The clocks that I have that monitor WWVB (i.e. Atomic clocks) changed when they should have.

    1. Re:WWVB broadcasts a DST flag in their time by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      And do you know how the bit is set?

      A toggle switch.

      And one spring, back when radio synchronized clocks were new stuff, the guy responsible forgot to flip the toggle switch.

      At least one major city's traffic lights had been converted to using the shiny new radio clocks for synchronization (so they could stop paying the tellco by the month for a copper pair to each traffic light control box). So the traffic lights stayed on the "night" schedule for an hour into the morning rush, utterly fouling traffic. It took 'em hours to figure out what the heck had happened.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    2. Re:WWVB broadcasts a DST flag in their time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's great. What about all those nice, fancy GPS clocks, though? For example, my car has a GPS nav system that it uses to set the clock. GPS doesn't know a damn thing about DST, so the nav system software just has it programmed in. What am I supposed to do now, wait for a recall to patch the firmware in my car?

      dom

    3. Re:WWVB broadcasts a DST flag in their time by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      I have two radio-controlled clocks. One of them obeys the DST bit, the other calculates it by the date. There is logic to both approaches.

      NIST only changes the DST bit when the time change actually occurs; the broadcast doesn't include anything to say "the time is going to change soon". If you live near Colorado, that's probably fine, but for many of us, the signal is weak enough that depending on the weather, the clock can't actually hear it 24/7. A couple of years ago, when a DST change occurred, my clock failed to change, and I showed up an hour early to church. Within a day or so, it had corrected itself.

      If you use the date to calculate when the DST change will occur, you don't have that problem. You can anticipate it, and reset the clock at precisely 2am, no matter what the weather is like. Obviously the problem here is that Congress can arbitrarily muck with it, so there really needs to be a way to update it. My other clock has this problem; I had to switch it from Pacific to Mountain time, then switch it back a few days ago. If I lived on the east coast, there would have been no way to make it display the correct time (it has a manual set button, but as soon as it picks up the radio signal, that will override the manually set time). I'm pretty unhappy about that.

      So, is WWVB's broadcast format extensible? Would it be possible to add information about an upcoming DST change, without breaking existing clocks that don't expect this information? I know NTP handles upcoming leap seconds...

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  115. Gah, My Pet Peeve! by Jekler · · Score: 1

    I despise DST. It's one of the most asinine concepts someone has ever pitched to me. I can't stand the terminology that surrounds discussions of DST, such as "...we have more daylight...". Scientists have proven to me that the amount of daylight in a given period is not affected by the clocks. Clocks are not time machines, they do not alter the space-time continuum. Clocks measure, they don't change it.

    If DST is such a great idea, maybe we should start skipping months instead of hours. When Summer arrives, we'll just call it "Fall" to save on air conditioning costs.

    1. Re:Gah, My Pet Peeve! by Peter+Mork · · Score: 1

      Ooh, can we also skip Winter to save on heating bills? While we're at it, can we skip time all together. I'm pretty sure that if we did I'd never have to pay a parking ticket again!

    2. Re:Gah, My Pet Peeve! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "...we have more daylight..."

      What the mean is:
        "...we have more daylight after school..."
      Which is true.

      It's funny that this comes in now, because there won't be any real ability to gauge for another 3 months.

      You could use a dose of common sense and be a little less pendantic. Perhaps actually think abuot what the person means when they talk. But I suppoes your to busy thinking what you will say next to actually think and listen to whom ever you are talking to.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:Gah, My Pet Peeve! by Jekler · · Score: 1

      I think you're the first one to ever accuse me of being pedantic. Common sense tells me that power consumption is not tied to clocks. Neither businesses nor individuals are going to artificially alter the amount of power they consume because they've got another (virtual) hour of daylight.

      Why won't there be any ability to gauge for 3 months? Obviously in 3 months there will be a larger sample pool, but that should only narrow the accuracy of the current assessment, I don't think it's going to alter it completely.

      Kudos, nice quip. Your personal attack makes your argument much stronger.

    4. Re:Gah, My Pet Peeve! by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think the best change that DST could address is the fact that power consumption is shifted further away from peak times (9a-5p is peak).

      The higher the peak at peak time is, the more 'instantaneous generation' power we need. However, if we can diffuse power need further away, we could possibly address power plant constructions and perhaps delay them another year to five.

      But that's the best I could come up with. And it's not that good of an excuse to monkey with the definition of time.

      --
  116. that's impractical, unfortunately by icefaerie · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yes, but it will remain that way for largely practical reasons. Having high schools let out earlier than elementary schools means that the older kids will be home to look after their younger siblings. The busing costs for school districts would skyrocket if all school levels ran simultaneously. The bus drivers first take the high school kids, then the middle school kids, then the elementary school kids. A school district would need a whole lot more buses running simultaneously to get everyone aged 5-18 to school at the same time. My high school and elementary/middle schools were actually two different districts, because I went to a regional high school. They had a bus-sharing scheme like this one worked out among all the districts.

    1. Re:that's impractical, unfortunately by krbvroc1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, but it will remain that way for largely practical reasons I think you meant to say largely economic reasons. We are forcing people into an educational situation when their brain is not ready for it. Apparently the money is more important then the learning experience.
    2. Re:that's impractical, unfortunately by Canthros · · Score: 1

      It's not a monetary issue. Unless you think that public school monies are only taken out your paycheck if you've got kids in school. In which case, I have very bad news for you.

      --
      Canthros
    3. Re:that's impractical, unfortunately by kestasjk · · Score: 1

      Back in England, and here in Australia, high school starts at 9:00am.. Didn't seem too impractical to me.

      --
      // MD_Update(&m,buf,j);
  117. Actually, it increased gasoline consumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, the earlier DST resulted in a net loss of energy, because more gasoline was consumed, as people did more driving in the evening hours.

    That is one of the contributing reasons why gasoline prices have been going up lately in the US.

  118. Re:It would mean REMOVING patches in Firmware by Technician · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This DST2007 thing has been a real pain in my ass.

    There is a lot of firmware that has not been patched or acknowledged due to low priority.

    I have a Linksys wireless router. Due to the difficulty getting kids offline to get ready for bed, I use the scheduler in the router to drop the connection. No nagging, begging for 5 minutes more 30 minutes later, etc.

    A week before the time change, I downloaded the latest firmware update and installed it.
    The changelog made no mention of the DST change so I checked the router Monday morning. It did not update. I have turned off DST in the router and changed the time zone one zone to the East to put it manualy into Daylight Savings. In the fall, I will have to remember to manualy move it back to the correct time zone.

    Un-patching this router is simply a matter of setting the time zone back and turning DST on.

    How much un-patched firmware is there?

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
  119. Re:there are other benifits to the new DST change. by /dev/trash · · Score: 0

    get to work earlier

  120. Re:Purpose of Government by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    Given all the laws they could have passed, this did some pretty minor damage. I'd rather them waste 6 months of the year debating DST than see what they actually put our for education, helth care, or welfare reforms. With laws, sometimes the only way to win is to not play.

  121. Saving Energy... by lionchild · · Score: 1

    I'm curious if perhaps the the reason we saw no energy savings, was because of all the extra time, money, and energy used up by the IT departments to either prepair for, or recover from the DST change? In the end, it was really a net-zero change. ;-)

    But more seriously, I wonder how much time and money was wasted with patching code and coddling systems, as well as dealing with failed patches? I suspect that's the real waste of energy in this situation.

    --
    Awk! Pieces of eight. Pieces of eight. Pieces of seven... ERROR: General Protection Fault. [Paroty Error.]
    1. Re:Saving Energy... by geekoid · · Score: 2, Funny

      It is an incredibly biased piece.
      It will be ,at the very least, a year before they can glean an real facts about the change.
      2 years would be more worth while.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  122. Who cares, it was brighter! by tentimestwenty · · Score: 1

    Personally, all joking aside, I was very happy to get more evening light earlier in the year.

    1. Re:Who cares, it was brighter! by Asphalt · · Score: 3, Funny

      If Daylight savings time is a good thing, then why not have it year-round?

    2. Re:Who cares, it was brighter! by Seumas · · Score: 3, Funny

      We'd be missing an hour of time for the rest of human existence.

    3. Re:Who cares, it was brighter! by AncientPC · · Score: 1

      Because we don't want to experience a 10am sunrise during the winter months.

    4. Re:Who cares, it was brighter! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The government tried this in the 1970's. It failed because on the western edge of each timezone, the sun rises so late that kids were walking to school in pitch black conditions, and the savings was (as was previously noted) was non-existant.

      This time around a lot of people THINK they know why this went on. If you really want to know, there were three groups lobbying for the time change..none of which had anything to do with energy savings. The three groups were an association of golf course owners, the BBQ industry and the candy making industry. (This is NOT a joke). The golf people wanted more people to go golfing for more of the year so they could make more profit. Moving DST up three weeks makes them a pile of money because people can have a round of golf after work for 3 more weeks. The BBQ industry also figured more people would grill out since it would still be light when people got home from work. They too will make a pile of extra money. The third group, the candy making industry, got them to shift the beginning by 3 weeks instead of 4 and the end by 1 week so that halloween weekend will still have DST, therefore more folks will have their kids out trick or treating so they will make a bigger pile of cash.

      I think we should set it back to what it was regardless of the cost of unpatching/repatching things..there are a lot of systems out there that for a wide variety of reasons could not be patched and other types of systems out there that have no mechanisom to patch them anyway.

    5. Re:Who cares, it was brighter! by nobaloney · · Score: 1
      It was actually done several times: WWI, WWII, and the winter of 1973-1974:

      http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/sci/A0814845.html

      The biggest problem during the last trial, if I recall correctly, was kids standing outside in the winter cold and dark, to get on their school buses.

    6. Re:Who cares, it was brighter! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When Ben Franklin originaly proposed the idea as energy saving, the energy was whale oil. It was expensive, and not that effective. Imagine having to fill oil lamps by hand, almost daily. One extra hour of daylight had a huge impact on your refilling of the lamps. Once energy became as cheap and easy as it is now, DST became a lifestyle issue. In the modern age, the energy savings over the last 3 weeks has been to small to even measure, since the number of tv's turned on didn't change.

    7. Re:Who cares, it was brighter! by sharkey · · Score: 1

      Kids stand outside in the winter cold and dark during Standard time too. K-5 and high school buses pick up before dawn from early November to April where I live. The whole "waiting in the dark" argument has as much basis in fact for Indianapolis as the "energy savings" argument does.

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    8. Re:Who cares, it was brighter! by Asphalt · · Score: 1
      Because we don't want to experience a 10am sunrise during the winter months.

      I've never seen a 9am sunrise in the lower 48 states United States regardless of what time shift we were on.

      As it is, Daylight Standard time is now only about 4 months out of the year. Or about 1/3rd of the year. The argument could legitimately be made that it is no longer "standard" at all.

      As the daylight shift is gradual, it is ridiculous to think that people would not be able to adjust during those 4 months arguably only two of said months (the peak being late December) would pose the most "morning darkness hardship". That's what streetlights and headlights are for. To mitigate the two months of one hour morning slight inconvenience which may or may not even exist.

      It seems asinine.

      If Daylight Savings Time is preferable for 66% of the year, then stick us on it, and end the ridiculous 4 month "Winter Bastardized Time" which is no longer "standard", and which appears to server no real purpose whatsoever.

    9. Re:Who cares, it was brighter! by rossdee · · Score: 1

      There are people that live just south of the border with Canada that would disagree with you. And even if the 'official' sunrise is before 9am in the winter, if you have hills, trees or buildings to the south of you it will be a while before you see the sun in December and January.

    10. Re:Who cares, it was brighter! by Asphalt · · Score: 1
      There are people that live just south of the border with Canada that would disagree with you.

      So everybody needs to go through this dance twice a year for the one percent of the people that live on the border with Canada?

      You would think they would have adapted by now, much like the people that live in Alaska and similarly situated areas.

      And even if the 'official' sunrise is before 9am in the winter, if you have hills, trees or buildings to the south of you it will be a while before you see the sun in December and January.

      Yeah, and people who work the night shift work in the fucking dark. It's bright enough at 9am just about any day of the year in the overwhelming majority of the country. Hell, I don't think I have even been in complete darkness at 8am. And even if I was ... who cares?

      We have streetlights. I have headlights. I have light bulbs in my home. Face it, the sun ain't going to be shining 24 hours a day no matter what we do. It's an imperfect planet. Modern society (hell, even primitive society) has leaned to adapt quite nicely to the fact that the sun rises and sets.

      I just ... don't ... see ... what bumping the clocks off for 4 months out of the year accomplishes.

      I'm not even sure if these supposedly helpless people with poor night vision on the Canadian border support the damn thing.

      If Daylight Savings time is such a great thing, then put us on Daylight Savings Time and be done with it.

      "Standard Time" ... a time that we are only on 33% of the year is a completely asinine concept.

      How can something be "standard" when the exception to the "standard" is in effect twice as long?

  123. WHy would you possible by geekoid · · Score: 1

    think having to patch computers would ahve any bearing on changing it back? Was it because of the huge 'bearing' it had on the decesion in the first place?

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  124. Ob. JonStewart by autophile · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'm a lobbyist with the North American Automatically Time Changing Clock, Watch and Timepiece Manufacturers Association...

    ...or "TIMEBLA"...

    --Rob

    --
    Towards the Singularity.
  125. how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    tossing DST altogether?

  126. Global brightening is real! by JurassicPizza · · Score: 4, Informative

    No joke -- all of the clean-air legislation has started to clear out decades worth of accumulated crud (aerosols) in the atmosphere. That results in more sunlight hitting the surface and intensifies the greenhouse effect. In fact, air pollution caused by the industrial processes that release greenhouse gases may have been limiting the warming impact of those greenhouse gases for a long time. Now that the air is getting clearer, the impact of those greenhouse gases may be exacerbated. This effect is also regional since different parts of the world have differing clean air standards.

    Here's the original article on this subject, from June 2006:

    http://www.meteo.psu.edu/~mann/shared/articles/Man nEmanuelEos06.pdf

    --
    --- JurassicPizza
    1. Re:Global brightening is real! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So this explains the warming of Mars... Save the Martians start a "Nuclear Winter" The Internet and VoIP is connecting more people with more features

    2. Re:Global brightening is real! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  127. Does not compute by buss_error · · Score: 1
    But the new DST is probably here to stay -- letting the bill expire would mean re-patching a lot of systems again next year.
    .

    I somehow doubt congress is paying the lest attention to the blood, sweat, and tears of IT teams across the country. Doubless they'll resend it, and we'll have another patch party next year. YEAH!!!! MORE OVER TIME!!!

    Hey, wait a minute... I'm on salary... Oh, dirty words, dirty words!!

    --
    Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
    1. Re:Does not compute by geekoid · · Score: 1

      As an hourly Software engineer, I am compelled to say:

      "Ha HA"

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  128. Rearranging deckchairs on the Titanic... by GrahamCox · · Score: 1

    ...is the phrase that springs to mind:

    But the new DST is probably here to stay -- letting the bill expire would mean re-patching a lot of systems again next year. So much for saving energy.

  129. No it wasn't. by mrchaotica · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You got exactly the same amount of light that you would have gotten anyway. You just think there was more because you didn't sleep in as late as you usually would have.

    Personally, I think anybody who needs the government to trick them into getting up early is a moron, but morons' opinions may differ...

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    1. Re:No it wasn't. by Jeremi · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Personally, I think anybody who needs the government to trick them into getting up early is a moron, but morons' opinions may differ...


      Perhaps it's not so much needing the government to trick you into getting up earlier, as it is needing the government to trick your boss into opening your place of work an hour earlier.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    2. Re:No it wasn't. by Gyppo · · Score: 1

      He didn't say he got more light - he said he got more evening light, which he did.

    3. Re:No it wasn't. by pizpot · · Score: 1

      Personally, I think anybody who needs the government to trick them into getting up early is a moron, but morons' opinions may differ...

      OK, but some people work and can't pick their office hours. If you are outside in the morning, you are working. If you are outside in the evening, you are BBQ'ing. So, you deserve the light in the evening.

    4. Re:No it wasn't. by Orange+Crush · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You got exactly the same amount of light that you would have gotten anyway.

      Correct, but some of us get an extra daylight hour after work that otherwise would've been wasted while we're cooped up in a building.

    5. Re:No it wasn't. by coopex · · Score: 1

      Correction: You are outside grilling, unless you plan to tend your BBQ pit all though the night. BBQ sauce does not a BBQ make...

      --
      The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
    6. Re:No it wasn't. by unitron · · Score: 1

      BBQ sauce does not a BBQ make...

      So, tomato or vinegar?

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  130. Get up early? No way! by tentimestwenty · · Score: 1

    I never get up when it's dark regardless of DST. As others have suggested, businesses should change their hours of operation so that it's not dark when employees start in the morning, not change all the clocks.

  131. Re:Valid reason to know local noon.. by Technician · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you have a local magnetic anomility, setting a C-band dish can be difficult as a magnetic compass may get your polar mount off enough to cause tracking problems. A sunny day and knowledge of local noon makes finding true North/South very simple. It's the direction of the shadow of the plumb bob line at local noon.

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
  132. Hey now by torstenvl · · Score: 1

    This summary is extraordinarily inflammatory. It's a very very very sad reflection on the community that an early poster was modded Flamebait for pointing out that "bashing like this summary is just not necessary" and making a South Park reference.

    This summary was written by someone with an axe to grind against the new Congress. Probably a Republican, but that doesn't matter. The point is that it's partisan hackery and has no place on Slashdot.

    It's also short on facts, since there isn't any way to know if the change caused a decrease in energy consumption or not -- all you can know is whether *MAKING* the DST change made a *NET* decrease in energy consumption. That is, since IT professionals patching systems until 10pm has through leaving operational systems on five hours longer for a week, etc. causes an increase in energy consumption, the net change this year could be significantly less than the overall change. You're not taking into account the overhead.

  133. Throwing it out doesn't cost much at all. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 4, Interesting

    alternatively...we can just get rid of DST altogether, since it has been shown to not do dick except annoy people and cost companies money in IT time.

    Getting rid of it altogether requires far less IT effort than moving it. Most systems can just be configured to run on standard rather than auto-daylight time. The rest you can just strip it out - much easier than putting it in or tweaking it every time the legislature gets another hive of bees in their bonnets.

    Staying with DST means a major ongoing hassle for any new scheduling application. Do you have any IDEA what a pain it is to program those with DST changes? *I* do: I had to do it for a client. What do you do with the 25 hour day - especially the hour that happens twice? What do you do with the 23 hour day?

    I hear the railroads handle it like this:
      - In the spring all the trains are suddenly an hour late, and try to make up the time over the next day.
      - In the fall they actually STOP them and let them SIT for an hour.

    I hear the worst day for commuter traffic deaths is the first Monday of DST. (It's rush hour with ALL the drivers jet-lagged simultaneously.)

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re:Throwing it out doesn't cost much at all. by Inthewire · · Score: 1

      Don't know about the rest of your post, but the railroad schedule part is bullshit.

      --


      Writers imply. Readers infer.
  134. Re:Purpose of Government by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

    "Won't someone Do Something(tm)! There Ought to be a Law(tm)! Think of the Children(tm)!"

    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  135. Re:Get up early? No way! by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

    Don't get me wrong, I'm a big fan of sleeping in too. But the important part of my comment was the "needing the government to trick you" bit, not the "getting up early" bit.

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  136. Last Congress.... by The+Monster · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It blamed congress for the change in Daylight savings time, and last I checked, congress is run by the Democrats.
    But it wasn't a year and a half ago when they passed the bill, and Bush signed it into law.

    People who oppose DST don't realize that it's just an attempt to recapture what people used to do automatically: Get up when the sun rises. The greater your latitude, the more variation there is in sunrise times between the solstices. We've settled on an hour as a good compromise that works for most people.

    --

    [100% ISO 646 Compliant]
    SVM, ERGO MONSTRO.

  137. The candy industry lobbied for this bill.... by DeafDumbBlind · · Score: 1

    This bill was as much about making it an hour brighter on Halloween, so that more candy would be sold, than it was about saving power...

    --


    Jesus used to be my co-pilot, but we crashed in the mountains and I had to eat him.
  138. 400 million??? by jelle · · Score: 1

    Don't worry, you're only off by more people than the entire population of, say, Germany...

    http://www.census.gov/population/www/popclockus.ht ml

    --
    --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
  139. I am so sick... by kalislashdot · · Score: 1

    ... the the US government trying to control our lives and social engineer everything. DST should be totally removed. Hawaii and Arizona don't observe it! I could have told them it would not have saved power. My lights are on in the morning now! Mark my words, one day the US government will fail and I can tell all those dumb ass mother fuckers who think voting democrat or republican REALLY matters that I was right all along.

    1. Re:I am so sick... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      people have been spouting off that same crap for 200 years.
      Yeah, it's going to stop working any day now.

      Here's a clue: get involved.

      As for your post, you really have no clue about DST, do you?
      Maybe it is worth it, maybe not. We won't know for a year, at least.

      ME? anything that lets me start BBQing earlier in the year is fine. :)

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  140. This DST change was worse than the Y2K Bug by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

    I am calling DST the Y2K7 Bug.

    I got a friend who tried to patch an Exchange Server and had nothing but headaches from trying to patch it. Microsoft made it so complex that it required a small book to read in order to figure out. Simple patches like that should be easier to use and not require reading more than two pages of information.

    My Tivo messed up my viewing schedule and it refused to download that 6.2 update and stayed on the 6.1 update.

    So who do we send the bill to for all of the lost time and productivity it took to solve this DST/Y2K7 Issue?

    --
    Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
    1. Re:This DST change was worse than the Y2K Bug by geekoid · · Score: 1

      you allude to Y2K.

      Do you relize what the reason is for there being very few issues on Y2K?
      because we FUCKING FIXED IT.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  141. Re:Get up early? No way! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... completely ignoring the "functioning in society" bit.

    People who complain about the gubmint are often just complaining about having to deal with other people.

    Sure, if I never had to talk to anyone or do anything, I'd get up at dawn and go to bed at sunset too.

    But I'd also be living in a cave, and be dead by now.

  142. Overall a plus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Give me extra daylight in the evening instead of the morning any day.

    Or at least for as many days as possible :)

  143. This was known by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    They already knew this, i just havnt figured out the angle of why they *really* pushed this garbage on is.

    Especially for those of us who didn't bother with it at all, until recentlty.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  144. Animals by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Animals dont care either, they still get up when the sun rises...

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  145. It didn't save energy, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... it did freak my cow-orkers out when I showed up an hour earlier than usual. (Long story short: I bought an alarm clock that automatically adjusts for the DST change; I had to manually adjust it on March 11.) You see, it was all just a government mandated April Fools prank.

  146. It's not about saving power by melted · · Score: 1

    It's about getting peoples buy more stuff in stores. You get off your work earlier where there's still sun shining. So what do you do? You go somewhere. Shopping, restaurant, etc. That's what DST is really for.

  147. Tokenism vs substance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you think maybe a carbon tax would help save energy?

    1. Re:Tokenism vs substance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Carbon tax? You mean environmental indulgences?

  148. Wow, are you raelly that obtuse? by geekoid · · Score: 0, Troll

    First off, if business change, you STILL HAVE TO CHANGE WHAT TIME YOU GO TO WORK.

    Second, every business may be running on differents noons. making business meeting, email server and many other things you small mind can't comprehend, nearly impossible to manage.

    Third, "it's supposed to be the time of day when the sun is highest in the sky."
    Are you really stupid, or do you think the world revolves around you? Noon in portland Oregon would be different then Noon in L.A. California.
    Your definition of noon stems from when people pretty much lived in the same village, and all there business was done in the same village.

    In other words, it's 'quaint'

    As far as this time change saving energy, or even just moving people off peak(which would also be good) we won't really know for a year. This artical is clearly biased.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:Wow, are you raelly that obtuse? by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 1

      Second, every business may be running on differents noons. making business meeting, email server and many other things you small mind can't comprehend, nearly impossible to manage.

      The GP wasn't talking about all businesses changing their clocks. Changing clocks does make these things hard to manage. Take DST for example. It changes from time to time, requiring software patches. Doing international business becomes more difficult when one has to keep track of arbitrary timezone changes around the world.

      You seem to be stuck on the concept that the time of day is purely a reflection of your working hours. Are you really stupid, or do you think the world revolves around you? Your definition of noon stems from where people pretty much live in office hives with no connection with the natural world or of any reality outside economics.

      In other words, it's 'quaint'

      Again the GP suggested changing business hours, as "open from 8:00 to 5:30", not clocks.

      --
      I don't therefore I'm not.
    2. Re:Wow, are you raelly that obtuse? by LordVader717 · · Score: 1
      Changing clocks is the easiest way to manage it. You start work earlier? What about the train? Do TV stations change their schedule to what their viewers prefer, or do some do, and others don't?
      What about the other businesses? Can you start making noise earlier? What about the kids? Do they start school earlier or not?

      BTW, International business will always have different local times, no matter if you scrap DST or not. Get used to it. Or use GMT for everything.

      Are you really stupid, or do you think the world revolves around you?

      I would say that people's measurement of time should revolve around people. And yes, if a change is advantageous, it can be done.

      We live by the clock cause that's the way modern society is structured, not because we're morons in office hives.
      If we all lived for the day, and didn't have to-do piles and schedules and meetings and working hours, if we were woken by roosters and sunbeams, then maybe we wouldn't need DST.
      But if you so much as use an alarm clock, you've already subordinated yourself to the mass of modern society.

      Before we had DST, people noticed that a lot of time was wasted. When it was introduced, people became more productive. You can see the positive effect DST has on the job market every year.
      You're not going to change human habits and laziness, but by simply changing the clock twice a year you have a huge benefit to society.
    3. Re:Wow, are you raelly that obtuse? by Steve001 · · Score: 1

      Max Littlemore wrote and included with a post:

      Second, every business may be running on differents noons. making business meeting, email server and many other things you small mind can't comprehend, nearly impossible to manage.

      The GP wasn't talking about all businesses changing their clocks. Changing clocks does make these things hard to manage. Take DST for example. It changes from time to time, requiring software patches. Doing international business becomes more difficult when one has to keep track of arbitrary timezone changes around the world.

      You seem to be stuck on the concept that the time of day is purely a reflection of your working hours. Are you really stupid, or do you think the world revolves around you? Your definition of noon stems from where people pretty much live in office hives with no connection with the natural world or of any reality outside economics.

      In other words, it's 'quaint'

      Again the GP suggested changing business hours, as "open from 8:00 to 5:30", not clocks.

      I often work the grave shift, so although DST doesn't directly affect my workday by the clock (I start and end my workday at the same time). But DST does make sleeping harder since I have even less dark time when DST is in effect.

      To me, the solution to the whole DST issue concerning software is to move away from having a central update for all users. Instead, why not have the software designed so that when you boot it up for the first time each year it asks you the day and time that DST starts and ends. This way when DST changes it can be easily handled by software. Since DST has been changed before, it can change again.

  149. Just do like I do - by Progman3K · · Score: 1

    I calculate my entire schedule in seconds-since-midnight-UTC-january 1st, 1970

    It took a little while to get the hang of it, but I'm glad to report; DST schemes have NO effect on it.

    While the rest of the world carry on debates about what to call this or that moment, time_t marches on...

    --
    I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
  150. It was mostly about peak shaving, I thought by rbrander · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I couldn't handle reading 300 posts, but I did search the whole topic for the word "peak" and nobody at 2+ used it. So here it is: we had a local news article in Calgary about the lack of change in TOTAL consumption,( just as many lights on in the AM as off in PM) but that it was good because it shaved the PEAK CONSUMPTION.

    People use the most energy right after they get home from work, basically; TV, computers (like me right now), cooking and other household operations.

    Removing added lighting needs AT THAT TIME reduces the maximum generating capacity you need available to meet the peak demand. Which means they build a new power plant for your area in 2014 instead of 2012, or whatever. The time-cost of money means real savings on your power bill - even at constant total kWh consumed.

    1. Re:It was mostly about peak shaving, I thought by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      yes, so the peak instead travels to the early morning hours when people need more light and more heating because they have to wake up earlier now.

      --
      Conservatism: The fear that somewhere, somehow, someone you think is your inferior is being treated as your equal.
    2. Re:It was mostly about peak shaving, I thought by Jtheletter · · Score: 3, Informative

      yes, so the peak instead travels to the early morning hours

      You're right that it travels to the earlier morning hours, but what travels is not the peak usage but the net difference in energy usage. So the evening hours are still peak use time - people are still going to use much more energy prepping dinner/watching evening tv/checking blogs than in the morning - but the morning peak has increased slightly. The afternoon/evening peak energy use is also usually reflected in the electricity prices, so it costs the consumer more per unit of energy in the afternoon and evening than it does in the early morning. So while there is not a net energy savings, there may be some cost savings. Granted, it will be miniscule to the average household energy consumer, but it is present. Unfortunately the way we tend to work in the US is if we have anything "extra" we decide it must be there to use, instead of save. And as others have stated, there is probably more of a cost in lost productivity because of the bi-annual clock change than a net savings of anything one would care to measure.
      Personally I've always been of the mind that after electric lighting went into widespread use it was time to do away with DST one way or another, I'd prefer to just set the clocks ahead 30 minutes one year to split the difference then never change them again.

      --
      -- I'm not a pessimist, I'm a realist. It's not my fault that life sucks so much. --
  151. Wanna know why?? by Grinin · · Score: 1

    Because it took more than 1 hour per computer you had to manually patch or mess with in order to correct the time issues, and thus.... no less energy consumed. I can't believe we still are using something as dumb as changing the hour on the clocks to try and conserve energy.

  152. But, but.... by moracity · · Score: 1

    what about the extra hour of daylight??? Congress said they were making more daylight...the energy companies are just wrong.

  153. Re: by MindStalker · · Score: 1

    Yea, I'm pretty sure all the fixes setup a system where DST can be easily set from the NTP connection. So changing DST every year won't be a problem for the devices that are properly programmed (my sanity on the other hand..)

  154. DST Saved No Power by loqutus48 · · Score: 1

    Actually, it saved the supposed power of the do nothing on energy Republican Congress. Even though I'm a Democrat, I doubt the current Congress will do any better.

  155. Re:Get up early? No way! by swv3752 · · Score: 1

    Or maybe it is more about useful hours of daylight after work. I don't care if it is dark when i getup as I will turn on the same amount of lights regardless. My bathroom gets no useful daylight so I need it on. My closet is dark regardless of the time of day. Regardless of when the sunsets, I get off work at 5, in part because I need to be at work for or clients. It takes the governmetn to give me an extra hour of daylight after work when it is useable.

    Personally, I'd be happiest of they never changed the clocks.

    --
    Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
  156. At least it's light out when I leave work... by divisionbyzero · · Score: 1

    I don't mind that...

  157. Re:Get up early? No way! by Cerberus7 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Ah, but I need the government to trick my boss into thinking the time for me to come in to work has changed. That's how I get my extra daylight. :)

    --
    I don't know about you, but my servers run on the power of cotton candy and happy thoughts. -Anonymous Coward
  158. Clearly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we need to do away with the notion of 24 hours per day every day. The business day should simply start at 5:00 AM and go until, say 11:00 PM. However, the length of the hour would be shorter in winter and longer in summer. Also, the number of hours of nighttime can vary and we can sleep longer in winter.

    A consequence of this is we need to actually vary the time required for each second. In the winter, this means we are allowed to less ground per second to adhere to speed limits. It's safer. Speeding in summertime would be nonexistent - the legal speed is much faster.

  159. Fucking A RIGHT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Aww but it's too hard to make people change their schedules" but it's so much fucking easier to make them get up an hour earlier or later?

    And I work for a company where I have phone conferences across many timezones and countries... I can't tell you what a mess DST makes of it.

  160. Arizona by bradray · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The rest of the world should follow Arizona's example. Don't touch your clocks. I grew up here in AZ, and for the life of me I can't understand why people want to mess with their clocks. If you want more daylight, get up earlier, or stay up later, whatever floats your boat. I'm usually a fan of the Founding Fathers, but Ben Franklin was off his rocker when he dreamed this one up.

    1. Re:Arizona by MaxLoad · · Score: 1
      "The rest of the world..."

      Actually, the rest of the United States would be fine...and even that is technically incorrect since one other state, Hawaii, doesn't adhere to DST.

      ...Ben Franklin was off his rocker when he dreamed this one up.

      No, IIRC he was dealing with shortages in his own time, that of candles.

      But the fundamental fallacy both he and the current politicaos have fallen prey to is that you can legislate behaviour. I'm pretty sure no matter how much you change the rules, the monkeys will do what they've always done, unless it serves their self interest to stop.

      --
      -- whatchulookinherefor?
  161. Here's why. by debest · · Score: 1

    I live in Canada, and I can tell you that we followed out of economic necessity, and no other reason

    It still makes no sense that Canada followed the USA in this.

    Canada itself has distinct 7 time zones... any one province is going more out of synch with regards to timekeeping with the rest of the country than it is with any state in the US, regardless of what the time is supposed to be just on the other side of the Canada-US border.

    It makes sense because business knows how far apart in time any two locations are. Vancouver to New York is 3 hours apart. Montreal to Chicago is 1 hour apart. Halifax to Seattle is 4 hours apart. Once you know the time differences, you can cope with them.

    But, if Canada didn't change with the States for DST, then for three weeks in the spring (and, what, 3 weeks in the fall?) that difference in time would be changed. For three weeks, the difference between the Eastern Time Zone in Canada and the Pacific Time Zone in the USA would be FOUR hours instead of the normal three hours. The confusion during this time would have been tremendous.

    Think particularly of the manufacturing sector and "just in time" deliveries that include a border crossing. For three weeks, it's one o'clock in Detroit and noon in Sarnia. It's 5:00pm in Niagara Falls, ON and 6:00pm in Niagara Falls, NY!

    No, we had no choice in the matter. It sucks, but it would have sucked harder to not have followed.
    --
    Look at the tomato! Isn't it sad? He can't dance! Poor tomato!
  162. Noon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You should move to Anchorage. Right now the sun comes up at 7:15 AM and goes down at 8:50 PM. This puts us a good two hours away from noon being the middle of the day, and it just gets sillier the further west you are.

  163. Re: by toddestan · · Score: 1

    Actually, since the whole DST thing has just been proven to be pointless, the most logical thing would be to eliminate it altogether. That way, both patched and unpatched systems would not need to be changed.

  164. Universal Time Coordinated by Danathar · · Score: 1

    One more argument for EVERYBODY the world over to move to UTC.

    Yes, you'd have to figure out when you eat and go to sleep and it would be different depending on where you were in the world. Once you figured it out it would not be that bad.

    People would bitch and moan, but they would get over it.

    Instead we play goofy games with clocks to "fool" people.

    In a world with UDT if a biz wants to stay open longer. Guess what? They would SHIFT THEIR HOURS!

  165. Or better yet, Blazing Saddles... by Spasmodeus · · Score: 1

    Gentlemen! Gentlemen!

    We've gotta protect our phonybaloney jobs! Something must be done immediately! Immediately!

  166. Took this opportunity to change our clocks to GMT by rwa2 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Rather than bother with the patch, we simply took this opportunity as a sign that we ought to change our system clocks to GMT. Many benefits:

    * Systems that dual-boot windows and linux no longer make oopses with DST transitions

    * our company does more and more projects across different timezones across the country and internationally, and it gets real confusing real fast to have everything in Eastern, Pacific, Arizona (they don't observe DST), Melbourne, and the UK.

    * we're an aviation company, so most of us are already used to it

    * most of our computers are on closed networks anyway

    So Congress is really doing us a favor by driving us towards a global economy with a common accessible timebase already established for maritime and aviation uses. Even if that's not what they intended :P But Congress works in mysteerious ways... (we have to try to assume, because admitting they're dumb just sucks for everyone :P )

  167. And I always thought that this was about spending$ by dcd · · Score: 1

    I thougth that this DST change was to get people "outside" enjoying the sun for a few more weeks a year, thereby spending more money for outdoor sports equipment.

  168. Earthhour by defiant1 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Something that may be of interest: In Sydney last weekend we all turned our lights out for an hour... check out http://earthhour.smh.com.au/index.php?option=com_c ontent&task=view&id=59 for the stats. According to Energy Australia, for the hour between 7.30pm and 8.30pm on 31 March 2007, there was a 10.2% reduction in electricity consumption across the Sydney CBD. This is calculated as follows: Sydney CBD temperature during Earth Hour was 19.8c. Typical energy consumption at this temperature between 7.30 and 8.30 is 228,180 KWh. Actual electricity consumption in the Sydney CBD at this time was 204,900 KWh. Energy Australia analysed data over 4 years to get the typical consumption on a Saturday night in the CBD during March and April. This takes into account daylight savings and weather. http://earthhour.smh.com.au/ for more info.

    1. Re:Earthhour by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      In Sydney last weekend we all turned our lights out for an hour...
      Except for the dramatic underlighting on the bridge - gotta make your symbolic sacrifice look good for the TV cameras, y'know - and quite a large number of office buildings.

      Still, it was a nice symbolic gesture. I walk out onto my balcony that overlooks Brisbane city every night, and imagine how much could be saved on a year-round basis just by turning off all the illuminated signs on top of every second building, billboard lighting at every major intersection and along every train line, etc. Even just turning them off after 9pm would make a hell of a difference.

      If it was water instead of electricity, turning them off would be mandatory by now. Or maybe not - even with level 5 water restrictions starting next week, the mobile dog-wash lobby has managed to gain exemptions from the restrictions. Our cars, houses, and gardens might look like shit, but we're allowed to have clean and shiny pets...

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
  169. Re:Valid reason to know local noon.. by codegen · · Score: 1

    It's the direction of the shadow of the plumb bob line at local noon.

    After adjusting for the time of year, depending on how accurate you want to be (+-3deg)

    --
    Atlas stands on the earth and carries the celestial sphere on his shoulders.
  170. Re:Quit'cher Bitchin' - mine worked by John+Jamieson · · Score: 1

    Sorry to hear about your bad luck. I bought two of those "Atomic clocks" that recieve the atomic time signal from the southern US. Both of them changed time correctly. I was amazed! Next time get one of those, they rock!

  171. Fired by DaFallus · · Score: 1

    I demand that every of member of Congress who voted for this idiotic bill hand in their resignation or hand over their heads.

    --
    No one cares what your captcha was

    Houston TX, USA
  172. Re:Don't foget about October.... (for the children by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was never molested when trick-or-treating as a child because the predators couldn't see me in the dark.
    Wrong risk - the greatest threat to kids at Halloween and almost any other time is the automobile. And the drivers can see better in the daylight.
  173. New DST annoyance... by cepler · · Score: 1

    This new DST change is quite annoying. I have some clock devices in my house that cannot be updated. They have hard coded points at which they adjust for DST, my clock radio for instance. So heres what happens, DST arrives, I have to set it manually, old DST arrives, I set it manually again (after forgeting) old DST ends adjust manually again, new DST ends, yup another adjustment... What a fucking pain in the ass. Can I get the government to buy me a new clock radio?

  174. Upton (R-MI) is the guy who introduced the bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  175. Re:Don't foget about October.... (for the children by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was.

  176. Was the change taken into account ? by Joebert · · Score: 1

    Just out of curiosity, was the 3 week difference taken into account ?
    It would be kinda funny if the savings was 3 weeks worth of power & nobody caught it because of a bug in DST on computers.

    --
    Wanna fight ? Bend over, stick your head up your ass, and fight for air.
  177. created and destroyed by steelbr2 · · Score: 1

    No matter how you look at it there are 24 hours in one day, and during the day people are going to use electricity. Shifting time doesn't change the effects of global warming or manage how companies use electricity. Electricity conservation is manifested in efficiency when low dissipation of power exists.

  178. Re:Valid reason to know local noon.. by Technician · · Score: 1

    After adjusting for the time of year, depending on how accurate you want to be (+-3deg)

    Please tell me about the +-3 degrees where local noon is not the halfway time between local sunrise and local sunset.

    If you use an atomic clock, I am familiar with local noon drift against UTC due to our eliptical orbit, but I thought local sunrise and sunset varied in sync with local noon. If this is not the case, I've been doing it wrong and not noticing.

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
  179. Chlorinate the pool. by FrameRotBlues · · Score: 1

    ... There are always 10-20% of people who misunderstood, are naturally disagreeable, are stupid, have some social agenda- who knows, maybe genetically random behavior has a certain reward- ...

    That percentage seems really high to me, but I don't see a lot of different walks of life. Anyways, there was a joke to make about that:

    The problem with the gene pool is that there's no lifeguard!

  180. Not everyone. by FrameRotBlues · · Score: 1

    Uh, where I came from in a rural area, buses were sent off to different routes, to pick up each family's worth of kids. I had a 45-minute bus ride into school, and about a 30-minute ride home. Everybody got on at the same time, and off at around the same time (the different schools were short distance away). 30 buses made 1 route in the morning and 1 route in the evening. There were 6 buses for kids who had afterschool activities that zigzag'ed across standard routes to drop the kids off in the evening. I think I understand where you're coming from, but that probably only works where students live relatively close to their school. I lived 14 miles away 'as the crow flies', so it wouldn't have worked for us. There'd be more diesel burned just getting on the outer edge to pick up 20 kids than it's worth. JMHO.

    1. Re:Not everyone. by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      In the city, a school will have 8-10 busses with 1 late for activities. For economic reasons, all of the busses are totally full in the case of elementary students. A route is about 40 minutes and then the bus is back at the school.

      So to run 30 of them for 40 minutes and then send the drivers home for the rest of the day would be a bit silly, so they run 8 of them with 4 trips each to handle different schools.

      Then there is always the practical matter of having the first grade students sitting with the 11th grade students. Since family is a pretty much absent concept to most western families, and "thinkofthechildren" is the order of the day, the 7 year olds would be "horribly traumatized" by the "inappropriate" conversations and actions from the older kids.

      After all, if a gradeschool kid hears someone say the word "gay" he will be scarred for life. We all know that.

      Economic reasons stemming from social decay? or something.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
  181. One Lone Fan of DST by Orphaze · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one that actually *likes* DST? As the antithesis of a morning person, I look forward every year to the one hour jump forward. I actually wish we could have permanent DST - nothing is more depressing than leaving work in the dark at 5pm (little to no natural sunlight for the entire day other than window light) where as I couldn't give a shit about the ride to work. What am I missing?

    1. Re:One Lone Fan of DST by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      nothing is more depressing than leaving work in the dark at 5pm... What am I missing?
      The option of having DST the other way around, in winter. Imagine that... you could then have roughly the same amount of aprés-work sunshine in winter as you do in summer!

      The pro-DST crowd seem to pooh-pooh this suggestion whenever I bring it up. They say it's silly. Why is it siller than having 3~4 hours of post-5pm sunlight in summer, and none at all in winter?

      Disclaimer: I live in a country where snow is pretty much restricted to mountaintops, and we get bone-smashing hailstorms on summer evenings...

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
  182. It's a British idea..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This whole Time Zone requirement is a British invention, designed to enable effective communication around an industrialised world-wide empire and a mechanical transport system.

    Most of the comments here about going back to local time are from American introverts who don't realise there is a whole world out there which needs to be operated effectively.

    If you have any complaints about the way we ran the world, why don't you send them to Greenwich?

  183. of course.... by martin_henry · · Score: 1

    ...it did throw people's focus off the war in Iraq.

    --
    www.purevolume.com/martyd
  184. I missed a class by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

    Because my computer updated, and my school didn't care.

    I'm sure this is not uncommon around the world.

    P.S. Fuck you MS and Ubuntu and Fuck you America...

    That is all.

  185. Who cares? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

    Well, now that the deed is done, let me be the first (or 12th, or whatever) to say: who cares? I'm personally quite pleased with the results of DLS: it's made the usable time in the day perceiveably longer, at least in the evening. This is really nice, since it's the time of the year when it's just starting to get nice outdoors again, and I can go do things!

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  186. DST change was entirely about making money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It was never about saving energy. The lobbies wanted this so they could make more money. More sun in the afternoon means more people go shopping. Congress never does *anything* unless it is about money.

  187. Re:Get up early? No way! by Nurgled · · Score: 1

    The problem is that changing the working hours for one business has knock-on effects. If I start work an hour earlier, I may find that now I start work before my kids go to school in the morning. I may find that the shop where I buy my morning milk and newspaper hasn't opened yet. I may be unable to do any work for the first hour of the day because my suppliers/customers haven't started work yet.

    While I'll readily agree that daylight savings time is a hack, it is quite effective in getting most of the population to operate an hour earlier at the same time, thus giving people that extra hour of daylight after work while ensuring that everyone else is operating on the same relative schedule.

    I'd be happy though if we just did away with timezones completely. The numbering of the hours of the day is completely arbitrary anyway, so why can't people in LA just get up at 14:00 and start work at 16:00? Even if this was done exclusively in the US it'd avoid the need for multi-timezone TV networks to advertise their show start times as "8/10c".

  188. This is why I love /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In fact, I fucking hate it. The sun is trying to kill me, and giving it any more opportunities to do that doesn't make me any happier.
    I wake up, scuttle over to my PC in the corner of the basement/Painkeep and read something that makes me wonder if I've been posting in my sleep again.
  189. 39 timezones, actually by splutty · · Score: 1

    For practical purposes, this isn't exact, but we've done a pretty good job with splitting the world up into 24 time zones so that it's somewhat close.

    The earth is indeed split into 24 lunes, which all have hour boundaries, however there are 39 timezones.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_time_zones
    --
    Coz eternity my friend, is a long *ing time.
  190. Re:Get up early? No way! by tbone1 · · Score: 1
    Personally, I'd be happiest of they never changed the clocks.

    I live in Indiana, and until recently we had no DST; by and large, people agreed with your opinion. (They probably still do.) We only went on DST because it was one excuse that businesses would list as a difficulty in expanding/moving to here. (Oddly, no one seems to worry about this with Hawaii and Arizona, but then Indiana doesn't have that "corporate junket" quality that those two states do.) The argument came down to this: the only way that DST makes sense is if everyone else is doing it, and unfortunately, that is the world in which we live.

    When I worked at NASA a few years ago, I mentioned one day that in Indiana, we didn't observe Daylight Savings Time. I got incredulous looks and the standard question: Why on earth do you guys not do Daylight Savings Time? To which I replied: Why do you guys observe it in the first place? I got blank stares and replies of "Duuuuuuuuuuuuuh....." And this, mind you, was at NASA, where we dealt with issues about time observance and measurement as a matter of course.

    --

    The Independent: Reverend Spooner Arrested in Friar Tuck Incident - ISIHAC, Historical Headlines
  191. Re:But...but..[The obvious answer] by galego · · Score: 1

    In this case, the Lobbyist's (retail industry from what I understand) courted both sides of the aisle and it was not as divisive an issue as IRAQ, Abortion, HealthCare, etc. To boot, it allows them to use the word 'Bipartisan' some more (e.g. "We passed a bipartisan bill intended (as far as you all know) to save energy, but we're having trouble coming up with any statistics to validate that").

    --

    Que Deus te de em dobro o que me desejas

    [May God give you double that which you wish for me]

  192. The real reason we have DLS time by The_mad_linguist · · Score: 1

    is because of the barbeque lobby. Their line of reasoning is that if it's dark when people come home, they won't grill their food outside, but if it's light out they will.

  193. Re:But...but..[The obvious answer] by walt-sjc · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It is estimated that it cost US businesses about a Billion dollars to implement this DST change. If congress would have instead mandated a billion dollars worth of conservation efforts (such as more energy efficient lighting, better building insulation, etc.,) it would have saved 10 times the energy that the bill was supposed to save as conservation helps ALL the time, not just for an hour a day, 3 weeks of the year. It really doesn't take a whole lot of intelligence to figure this one out...

  194. Re:Get up early? No way! by danbert8 · · Score: 1

    I don't agree, I like getting to sleep in when ever I travel west :)

    --
    Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
  195. Re:Thanks Democratic lead congress by SengirV · · Score: 1

    They said "Vote for us and we'll lower gas prices" And the sheeple fell for it. QED

    --

    Prof. Farnsworth - "Oh a lesson in not changing history from Mr I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!"

  196. I don't get why they don't go ahead and un-change by Zero_DgZ · · Score: 1

    Let's think about this. It resulted in no actual, meaningful decrease in energy use. It pissed off absolutely everyone in the country with any kind of electronic device that keeps time. And if you have an 'old' electronic device (Palm 3 among scads of others in my case) there was no patch or update for you anyway. Then factor all the people in who didn't patch because they're Joe User consumer types and don't know how or care. Then factor in all those poor slobs running Win2k server who had to pay however many thousands of dollars for the patch, but couldn't justify the expense.

    This is a simple matter of Congress' petty ego, and now it's obvious to the whole word. "Well, we had to begrudgingly admit that we really were wrong, just playing bullshit feel-good politics and not actually doing any real work, but the Federal government is infallible and therefore we're going to stick our thumbs up our asses and pretend that there's no going back. And as usual you slobs will get the shaft, not us. By the way, re-elect all of us in '08."

    Feh.

  197. Bad analogy by iceperson · · Score: 1

    If you said "I'm going to swing this wrecking ball at the wall you're standing in front of in 2 weeks." then you should reasonably expect me not to be standing in front of said wall when that time comes.

    I was able to eliminate any problems like those of the OP by simply sending an email out that reminded everyone of my foreign contacts of the change.

    1. Re:Bad analogy by Copid · · Score: 1

      I was able to eliminate any problems like those of the OP by simply sending an email out that reminded everyone of my foreign contacts of the change.
      Something which clearly, when done by everybody in a company with hundreds or thousands of employees, costs absolutely nothing and never results in errors, obviously.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  198. Remember Remember the 4th of Novemeber! by Licorice101 · · Score: 1

    How about one data point at least before we throw our hands into the air? I mean we're not even through the first execution of the new DST yet! Did you forget about Novemeber? I'd be more inclined to bitch and moan after some more data...

  199. Double Switch by ks*nut · · Score: 0

    In baseball it's called the double switch - drop the concept of daylight savings time and adopt the metric system. Now that would be an exciting weekend!

  200. Remember the good old days? by misfit815 · · Score: 1

    I'd just like to say, on behalf of myself and many other Hoosiers, that all that time our state didn't observe DST was really nice. We enjoyed it. Here's to you, Arizona and Hawai'i.

    J

    --
    Jesus told him, "I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one can come to the Father except through me. - John 14:6 NLT
  201. Re:But...but..[The obvious answer] by wtansill · · Score: 1

    It really doesn't take a whole lot of intelligence to figure this one out...
    We are talking Congress here -- you did know that didn't you?
    --
    The contest for ages has been to rescue liberty from the grasp of executive power. -- Daniel Webster
  202. Strictly about the money by penguinrenegade · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Someone did think of children - their own. Daylight savings time does not save energy, quite the contrary. One of the largest INCREASES is in gasoline consumption. The reason for the DST extension is simple - increase in shopping - hence those who own businesses & oil make more - and so do their children benefit.

    Add to the fray the changing from winter to summer mix (and back at the end of DST) and you have a recipe for charging more for oil. Anyone have gasoline over $3 a gallon where they are right now? And all this BEFORE the Iran conflict with England. The oil companies switch mixtures and "clean" their tanks in the process, every March and every fall. March prices rise through April due to "less supply" but the same demand. The reality is the gasoline goes through at the same rate. It's all supply/demand *on paper.*

    September brings Labor Day and "increased travel" for that holiday in the US, but prices CONTINUE to rise after that, due to switching the mix again. Add to that more shopping (more daylight DOES mean more shopping) and lo and behold it's all about the money. What else can we expect from a government that lets the President veto bills from the House and Senate because he wants to keep the Iraq war going, when less than 19% of the US supports the war? Definfitely fed up - but this move is STRICTLY over money.

    1. Re:Strictly about the money by time$lice · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up!

      This is the only thing the DST move is about. Don't let anyone fool you into to thinking this is about saving energy - that's a load of BS. It's all about the $.

  203. Congress didn't really spend all that much time by AveryRegier · · Score: 1

    Congress really didn't spend all that much time on this provision. It was a minor vote to add this to the Energy Bill in a committee. The bill as a whole was then voted on in Congress without much further thought to the DST provision. This whole mess was actually brought about with very little deliberation.

    When I submitted the first Slashdot story on the topic, I was hoping that it might elicit some kind of outcry from the community that might have stopped this provision before the Energy bill as a whole got approved. I had way too much faith in this place.

  204. Do you know why we fixed it? by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

    Because we knew about it since 1995 or earlier and had at least five years to fix it. Time enough to make the Y2K changes to make sure everything worked.

    How much notice was given on the DST change? Five years or less? I think the former.

    --
    Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
  205. Re:Get up early? No way! by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Ah, but I need the government to trick my boss into thinking the time for me to come in to work has changed. That's how I get my extra daylight. :)"

    One man's 'funny' is another man's 'insightful'. Every business I've worked at had its start/end times set to work with the start/end times of the businesses it worked with. You'd think reality would prevent somebody with mod points from +1'ing somebody for loudly proclaiming that DST doesn't actually cause more sunlight to hit this side of the planet.

    --

    "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

  206. Simple Soution: Year-Round DST! by rewinn · · Score: 1

    That way, we'd accrue the benefits 365.25 days of the year!!!

  207. Thank a Republican by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So we see how, once again, the "Do Nothing" Republican congress accomplished nothing.

    First they let lobbyists write legislation, then they give government authority to private groups (like the RIAA, MPAA, and Blackwater), and finally they give all legislative branch powers to the president... who uses it to do nothing good for America (as his family always has).

    It all proves, once again, that there are two kinds of Republicans: criminals, and criminal enablers.

  208. Take it further by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I personally like daylight savings time. I'd much rather prefer to have an hour of daylight in the evening rather than in the morning. I just wish we would go on it full time and leave it. No more adjusting.

  209. About your tag line by hicksw · · Score: 1

    You have been using

              I want the future where "resurrection" is a medical specialty.

    as a tag line. Perhaps you have not read the first chapter of "Distress" by Greg Egan.
    He presents a version of resurrection that few of us would wish on ourselves, our friends, or even our enemies.
    --
    Complex numbers are magical - the real and the imaginary mixed together.

    1. Re:About your tag line by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you have not read the first chapter of "Distress" by Greg Egan. He presents a version of resurrection that few of us would wish on ourselves, our friends, or even our enemies.

      Thanks for the reference. I'll try to give it a read once (if ever?) things get less hectic.

      Meanwhile, the resurrection I'm referring to is just an extreme version of resussicitation and medical repair: Going beyond the half-hour of clinical death of a drowning victim in cold water and patching broken bones to hauling somebody's head out of the liquid nitrogen and rebuilding him/her into an idealization of the body he/she had (or should have) at 18 - with a few tweaks to hold off disease, reduce aging, etc. B-)

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  210. Re:Get up early? No way! by finarfinjge · · Score: 1

    Boy that would make life in the north great! To work at 10:00, home at 2:00. WooHooo, the four hour day. Ok, 9:00 to 3:00 in England, but sounds really good for Finland.

    JE

  211. Re:Good for the wrong reason (and bad for others) by phorm · · Score: 1

    Being an IT worker? Well, patching a whackload of systems/servers with updated DST settings comes to mind. This of course only includes those systems that could be patched, not the ones that had hardwired settings and/or required firmware updates that aren't yet available.

  212. DST change dates should be based on daylight hrs! by mathx · · Score: 1

    Isnt the whole point of DST to shift our schedules so we have more light after work, once there's enough light in the morning to get the economy started? we certainly dont need sun at 530am (but being in canada we get it even with dst!) when most people are asleep.

    So if thats the reasoning, then DST should be formulated on how many daylight hours there are. Assuming symmetry around Dec 21 (rough equinox date, i know if shifts 6-24 hrs around
    that), then changing to ST in end of first week of Nov when we have something like 10 hrs of daylight here (Toronto, rough guess), means we should shift to DST at 10hrs of
    light/day (at my lattitude) whenever that occurs symmetrically after Dec 21. Nov 6 -> Dec 21 is ~ 45 days, we should therefore change to DST on Dec 21 + 45 days = Feb 6!
    (Rough estimate.)

  213. So don't by 2short · · Score: 1

    "Change your schedule, not my clock"

    Your clock is your clock and you may set it to whatever you like. Your schedule is your schedule and you can keep it however you like.

    The people of the United States, through the admittedly imperfect mechanism of collective action we call government, have decided to change the setting on those clocks that belong to us through that government, acording to a scheme we call DST. It is beleived by some that this is the easiest way to effect the seasonal change in scedule you seem to ackowledege is desirable, and particularly the easiest for others who wish coordinate changes to their schedules.

    None the less, nobody is touching your freakin' clock. If you have some wacky idea that the time your clock indicates is somehow sacredly ordained, and not merely an artificial construct for convenience in coordinating activities with others, by all means set it to mean solar time for your exact location, or whatever else you like.

  214. Re:I don't get why they don't go ahead and un-chan by markimusk · · Score: 1

    On my Palm IIIc, I just turned DST off, changed the time. Now it's like any other clocked device in the house, I have to change it twice a year, no different, no patch needed.

  215. Re: by jZnat · · Score: 1

    NTP is done via UTC (aka GMT+0), and the device itself calculates the local time from that. UTC sadly won't help the timezone problems...

    --
    'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
  216. Re:Took this opportunity to change our clocks to G by onemorechip · · Score: 1

    I don't see how that helps with what must have been the biggest problem with the DST change: meeting schedules.

    Let's say you have a 9 AM meeting every Friday, so you set it up as a recurring meeting. You're in PST8PDT so you set it for that time, which is translated to 1700 GMT. Your scheduling software (still unpatched as of the time you set up the meeting) thinks DST starts April 1, so it adjusts the time, for those occurrences after April 1, to 1600 GMT. But starting in the week of March 11, 1700 GMT is now 10 AM PDT, so when the patch is made, your meeting shows up at 10 AM for three weeks, which is the wrong time.

    To make matters worse, by the time you find out, you find that somebody has already nabbed the conference room for that 9 AM slot. Or IT instructs you not to make the change manually, as "we are working on it". The latter happened in my case, and only on March 12 did they find that my system needed Service Pack 2 to recognize the change. I'm still getting annoying messages every time I boot, saying some program was unable to write to address 0, apparently a side effect of the SP2 upgrade.

    --
    But, I wanted socialized health insurance!
  217. Re: by MindStalker · · Score: 1

    Sorry.. Obviously this isn't "standard" NTP. But from what I understand many domain solutions now how the main server communicate DST change information..

  218. Who cares? by dacaldar · · Score: 1

    I've wanted us shifted an hour or two forward year-round for a long time now. It's great to move the sun out of the mornings, when it's just pesky (and helps my preschooler wake up too early) and into the evenings, when I can enjoy it with outdoor activities instead of getting fat in front of my keyboard or TV :)

  219. Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know, those same signs that say which hours they have each day of the week are nice & changeable. In other words, twice a year, they could update it with the new hours.

    Also, I happen to live in Arizona, where we conveniently ignore DST. You have no idea how nice it is. There's also no mass chaos here. In fact, it's downright unnoticeable.

    The only big difference is that I did NOT have to screw with my computer or recode a bunch of applications in order to change when DST occurs. It's a very welcome change. Try not having DST before you knock it. And get up an hour earlier or do things in the MORNING if you think the "extra" hour of daylight is anything special or wonderful.

  220. Re:Valid reason to know local noon.. by codegen · · Score: 1

    The local noon drift against UTC was what I was talking about. If you set your
    very accurate clock (or even a quartz clock) against local noon in November, it will
    not read noon at local noon in February. it will be more than 30 minutes off.

    --
    Atlas stands on the earth and carries the celestial sphere on his shoulders.
  221. Re:Valid reason to know local noon.. by codegen · · Score: 1

    I hit submit too soon. I also wanted to mention I was talking about mean solar noon.

    --
    Atlas stands on the earth and carries the celestial sphere on his shoulders.
  222. Re:Valid reason to know local noon.. by Technician · · Score: 1

    The local noon drift against UTC was what I was talking about. If you set your
    very accurate clock (or even a quartz clock) against local noon in November, it will
    not read noon at local noon in February. it will be more than 30 minutes off.


    Thanks, I'm still accurate by using local noon as the time midway between local sunrise and local sunset.
    At local noon, the sun shadow is directly on a N/S line.

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
  223. The real issue by dualityshift · · Score: 0

    Tell me why American Government "decides" to change DST and the rest of the world must follow suit? This sn't a matter for the U.S. Government to handle as the effects are felt worldwide. The U.N. should have made the final decision on this. At least they would be doing something productive.