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Re: end of Daylight Savings...

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 12:08 am
by The Big Ben
I dunno. Why don't you make some and see?

Re: end of Daylight Savings...

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 12:42 am
by Dan Schultz
Daylight savings time doesn't officially end until 2am. You're gonna be awake for a while in order to find out.

Re: end of Daylight Savings...

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 9:54 am
by iiipopes
What happens, from experience, is that anything submitted between 1:00 and 1:59:59 a.m. posts with the time indicated in daylight savings time on the host computer, not the submitting computer.

At 2:00, when those host computer-driven clocks with the time change aplet automatically adjust, then 2:00 is automatically 1:00, and everything posts with the time from 1:00 a.m. on, in standard time. So you could make the same post one hour apart, and it would look like a double post. Or you could make a different post one hour apart, and it would look like twilight zone.

As for me, with my Mom's folks traditionally having been farmers, daylight savings time is a curse. The cows don't like to be milked an hour differently depending on the season, to say nothing about the rest of the chores, like seasonal hay baling, etc. So it may be fine for city-slickers, like I have become - Dad's side of the family were teachers and lawyers, but for the folks that keep us fed and clothed it is a pain in the @$$.

Re: end of Daylight Savings...

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 11:11 am
by Dan Schultz
I don't have a problem with Daylight Savings Time. However... I DO NOT like being an hour behind the rest of Indiana except for a couple of counties southeast of Chicago. Evansville (southwestern corner of Indiana) is on Central Time.

Re: end of Daylight Savings...

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 11:34 am
by bort
Know what confuses me every time? Trying to figure out, if I forget to set the clock back (or ahead), would I be 1 hour early or late the next day? I was a math major, and do a ton of work with numbers at work and school, all day every day. Yet adding and subtracting 1 is just too much for me. :oops:

Re: end of Daylight Savings...

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 11:46 am
by gwwilk
I always start during the day on the Saturday of the pending switchover. One year I adjusted a couple of watches an hour in the opposite direction before I realized it. :oops: (Yeah, I know, I'm a dinosaur because nowadays most just check the time on their smartphones. I think looking at my wrist is a heck of a lot easier than digging out my smartphone. A stealthy glance at my wrist can also be a lot more subtle when I need to check the time without someone else noticing.)

Re: end of Daylight Savings...

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 12:08 pm
by Dan Schultz
bort wrote:Know what confuses me every time? Trying to figure out, if I forget to set the clock back (or ahead), would I be 1 hour early or late the next day? I was a math major, and do a ton of work with numbers at work and school, all day every day. Yet adding and subtracting 1 is just too much for me. :oops:
Just forget trying to figure out whether you lose or gain an hours sleep! The simplest way for me to remember is:

- In the Spring you 'spring forth'. 2am becomes 3am.

- In the Fall you 'fall back'. 2am becomes 1am.

Re: end of Daylight Savings...

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 1:59 pm
by The Big Ben
iiipopes wrote:As for me, with my Mom's folks traditionally having been farmers, daylight savings time is a curse. The cows don't like to be milked an hour differently depending on the season, to say nothing about the rest of the chores, like seasonal hay baling, etc. So it may be fine for city-slickers, like I have become - Dad's side of the family were teachers and lawyers, but for the folks that keep us fed and clothed it is a pain in the @$$.
I've always been told that the "daylight savings time" was designed to be an advantage for the farmers. Really haven't given it a lot of thought. I worked outside for years and the end of daylight savings time meant we had to shut off work an hour or so earlier because, along with the changing of the seasons, the loss of an hour's daylight made it so we couldn't see what we were dinging and it was very impractical to light up our working area.

But, what do I know? I'm a Liiiiiberal.

Re: end of Daylight Savings...

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 4:49 pm
by iiipopes
The Big Ben wrote:I've always been told that the "daylight savings time" was designed to be an advantage for the farmers. Really haven't given it a lot of thought. I worked outside for years and the end of daylight savings time meant we had to shut off work an hour or so earlier because, along with the changing of the seasons, the loss of an hour's daylight made it so we couldn't see what we were dinging and it was very impractical to light up our working area.

But, what do I know? I'm a Liiiiiberal.
Yes, the "benefit to farmers" is a myth. One of many. Here you go:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions ... story.html" target="_blank

http://www.history.com/news/8-things-yo ... aving-time" target="_blank

Re: end of Daylight Savings...

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 5:12 pm
by DHMTuba
Yes, the "benefit to farmers" is a myth.
In one history I read, a farmer was quoted as saying "cows can't read clocks".

Re: end of Daylight Savings...

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 7:09 pm
by Dan Schultz
DHMTuba wrote:
Yes, the "benefit to farmers" is a myth.
In one history I read, a farmer was quoted as saying "cows can't read clocks".
I've always wondered if it really mattered if the daylight hours came earlier or later in the day.

While in The Navy... I was quite content with Zulu time. I don't think there should be time zones at all.

Re: end of Daylight Savings...

Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2015 10:00 pm
by The Big Ben
Cows may not be able to read clocks but they know when they want their tits pulled. They get angry when it's tardy.

Jeff "E-I-E-I-O" Benedict