Time for my semi-annual clock-changing rant

I agree, lorinada. I keep hearing that it’s for the farmers, too, but my home province, Saskatchewan (the world’s bread basket, where every other person is a farmer) doesn’t use DST, so let’s just put that argument to rest right here and now.

I have an internal clock, too (I don’t need to use an alarm clock - I wake up whatever time I need to), which takes a good long time to reset twice a year, and it messes up my biorhythms something fierce for my body to know what time it is and have the clocks saying something different. Bleagh.

Sorry, Gorsnak, I didn’t see your post. Yeah, when I left Saskatoon, I didn’t even know how to do this whole time-changing thing. If they put it to a vote in Alberta, we could probably get rid of it here, since most of Alberta is us transplanted Saskatchewanians anyway. :smiley:

I’ve been switching clocks back and forth for so damn long that I don’t know if I’m on Mother Nature’s time or goddamned government time. I think I’m gonna buy a sundial and just go by that. I’m retired, I don’t give a damn what time it is.

I love daylight savings time :smiley:

Please don’t throw things at me.

I find this sort of reasoning weird. Yes, it’s all cos those big bad commerce bogeymen are forcing beer, barbecues, steaks and amusement park visits upon us, the fiends!

Has it occurred to you that the real message in your post is that changing the clocks results in more people being able to enjoy themselves drinking beer, eating steak, having BBQs and going to amusement parks, and that those people like doing that, and that changing the clocks is therefore a Good Thing?

AAAAGGGHHHHH!!! Bite your tongue! Changing the clocks is a Bad Thing! Bad! Bad, I tell you!

No. Good. Good Thing. Tell me why it’s Bad.

And if you say “because I can’t be arsed to change my clocks, and my wishes in that respect count for more than the wishes of people who want BBQ’s” I will personally come to your place and slap you in the face with a juicy steak while pouring beer over your head.

So there.

Because when you deal with large computer systems, like mainframes, DST is a fucking ordeal. Special jobs have to be run to sync up the systems with the new times (especially difficult with sysplex, an IBM system that links mainfram LPARS). Weeken production batches have to be held, and restarted in a complicated fashion, because it’s the internal clock that triggers them off. Then all CPU’s must be powered off, then powered back and brought up cold. Something ALWAYS goes wrong. ALWAYS!

Here, it’s a Bad Thing only because it’s not consistent. Doesn’t work nearly as well when only four states have it. :slight_smile: But you live here too, so I guess you’ve already worked that out.

[spooje got a post in there before me. I was talking to Princhester about the lack of DST in Queensland.]

Not much point having it in the north of Australia as there is no great variation in daylight from winter to summer.

Really, daylight savings is just the easiest way to get everyone to go to work an hour earlier and finish an hour earlier so that we can have longer afternoons.

The only thing I don’t like about it is that it fades the curtains. Oh well… a small price to pay.

Well, depends what you mean by “north”. There’s enough variation in Brissie that DS would make a real difference (for the good in my opinion obviously).

Fades the curtains? Never mind 'bout that. What about the fact it puts the sheep off their feed, causes one’s pumpkin scones not to rise, and makes the cow’s milk taste funny?

Yeah, Brisbane would make sense. Darwin there’s no point and I would think that Cairns wouldn’t benefit much either.

It was quite bizarre when I was living in the South Island of New Zealand. In the height of summer with daylight savings, the sun would be going down between 10:30 and 11:00pm then back up early early morning (always before me).

We used to take the curtains down during DST and you’d never drink the milk either. Though there were some farms that didn’t observe DST so their milk was ok.

Here’s an interesting bit of info:

If you think that Mondays were already bad enough, the Monday after the time change also has a higher number of vehicular accidents due to people not being awake as they should as they make their morning commute.

Big fucking yay.

Can we somehow combine my two pet hates (Daylight Savings Time and the designated hitter rule) into a single grand conspiracy?

I thought I read somewhere that the reason DLS was for energy conservation back around the depression and they just kept it that way since.

Anyway, they have clocks and watches now that change by themselves. I bought one ($20.00). Theres an atomic clock in Colorado that sends radio signals several times of day all over the US and the clock has a reciever in it and keeps in time with that.

I’m with you featherlou. I say, pick a time - either one - and keep it all year. I don’t mind chaning the clocks - I just hate trying to adjust my schedule.

Changing the clocks is Good. Cecil said so. So there.

It knows how to do this for exactly the same reason you do. As long as the date (month, day & year) is known, the First Sunday in April becomes the day to move the clocks forward one hour, and the Last Sunday in October, the day to move them back.

See, now wasn’t that easy? Takes only a microwhatever for a mere computer.

If that’s the way you feel, then don’t read the following:

It ain’t rocket surgery. First Sunday in April, last Sunday in October. Except in AZ, HI, and parts if IN. Really quite simple.

As for messing up my schedule, I figure its a small price to pay for increased daylight (and the promise of Summer) in Spring, or an extra hour of sleep in Autumn. I love it.