• Immersive_Matthew@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    I would have stern words with John Riccitiello the ex Unity CEO who really neglected the core of their business for the years he was there. He was fired not too long ago. Games from scratch covered the conclusion of that train wreck. The new CEO seems to get that they need to refocus on the engine and making it better for developers versus chasing money. https://youtu.be/woTLLrgywwE?si=BIXTJGGMjpjv72vO

  • Malix@sopuli.xyz
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    3 months ago

    I’m ok with timezones, but the guy who invented daylight savings time I’d slap to all the way to the sun

    • northendtrooper@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      IIRC daylight savings was created way back when electricity really didn’t exist so it allowed the farmers more daylight to harvest their crops.

      Now with that said there is more technology in today’s farming equipment so DST shouldn’t really exist anymore.

      • zerofk@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        That’s a misconception. Farmers lobbied heavily against DST. Their work does not abide by the clock; they milk when cows need milking, and they harvest when there’s enough light, no matter what some clock says.

        In Europe, DST as we know it now was first introduced by Germany during WW1 to preserve coal, then abandoned after the war, and widely adopted again in the 70s. In the US it was established federally in the 60s.

        This is all glossing over a lot of regional differences and older history. But yeah, US farmers were very much against the idea.

        • Gork@lemm.ee
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          3 months ago

          I blame Big Ice Cream™.

          Those ice cream trucks get an additional hour of daylight to hawk their goods before the children are recalled back inside for supper.

      • Bassman1805@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        It’s not about the crops, farmers work by the sun, not by the clock.

        It was able conserving candles and oil, for lighting rooms.

      • snooggums@midwest.social
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        3 months ago

        So, this is wrong on so many levels. First of all, DST had nothing to do with farmers, it was to save energy usage in the summer as people were doing more things after work when the evenings were warmer.

        IIRC daylight savings was created way back when electricity really didn’t exist so it allowed the farmers more daylight to harvest their crops.

        DST does not increase the amount of daylight on any specific day of the year, it just shifts it later in the day so that people in 8-5 jobs can do more things after work. Farmers don’t work 8-5, they work as needed so if the crops need harvesting they will get harvested based on the weather.

        Now with that said there is more technology in today’s farming equipment so DST shouldn’t really exist anymore.

        Nowadays farmers have lots of lights and can harvest after the sun goes down, but that has nothing to do with why DST shouldn’t exist. DST shouldn’t exist because it doesn’t save energy due to any populated place having their lights on all night and the actual changing of time leading to negative outcomes like deaths from accidents with no benefits.

        Sure, the sun will come up earlier and set later in the summer if we get rid of DST, but the only reason for the time change in the first place was the standard working hours being longer after noon than before.

        • ReluctantMuskrat@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          My understanding is DST did still save appreciable energy until we replaced incandescent lights with fluorescent and leds. Longer daylight in the evening when people are awake and less in the early morning when people are asleep means lights aren’t being used as much. The average light bulb used to consume 60 watts or more and also let off significant undesirable heat, so with a house full of lights DST really did cut back energy usage. Now though with led lights low consumption and virtually no heat, it’s not nearly as significant.

          • snooggums@midwest.social
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            3 months ago

            Farmers don’t care about clocks unless they are scheduling a time to meet and using the clock for clarity.

            The sun comes up when it comes up and that is what matters. Farmers don’t care about the clock for what they consider morning, because morning is before the sun is highest in the aky. They are already getting up a few minutes earlier or later depending on whether the days are getting longer or shorter.

            DST has nothing to do with farmers.

            • someguy3@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              I think you misread my comment. It’s along the lines of if anything they would prefer the morning.

                • someguy3@lemmy.world
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                  3 months ago

                  This is besides what I was saying, which was again “if anything”. But dude people live in the world. Farmers are not 1000% in their own bubble. They need to go out to stores and get supplies and interact with the world and the supply chain. You are now taking lack of an office schedule or something to a ludicrous degree with your analogy. I wasn’t even disagreeing with your old points, I was saying “if anything” and adding another reason why farmers and DST makes no sense, but you want to go off on seemingly everyone. Perhaps you’re confusing me with the other guy, but whatever. Cheers.

        • Crashumbc@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Actually DST was a war world one thing to save energy. To not need lighting in the factory.

          Look it up you’re both wrong.

          It actually was only active during WWI and WW2 until late 60s or early 70s (oil crunch may have brought it back.)

          • snooggums@midwest.social
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            3 months ago

            Originally being started for WWI and WWII doesn’t contradict my post which talks about the current reasons given to keep it and that it is not saving energy now.

        • azertyfun@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          3 months ago

          and set earlier in the summer*

          I hate it. I fucking hate it. With every fiber of my being. I spend every winter counting the days until the sun stops setting before I stop working. Our entire lives are scheduled so we are inside under neon light from 9-6, why are we trying to maximize how much of that is during daytime?

          On the day that we go back to permanent ST I will turn to hard drugs to make up for the dopamine deficiency. No joke very few things in my life fill me with more dread than having to suffer early evenings for the rest of my life.

          • snooggums@midwest.social
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            3 months ago

            Maybe, and hear me out, the problem is that 9 to 6 is the problem, since 2/3 of that time is after noon. Instead of changing reality to appease business, business, work hours could be changed to 8 to 4 with four before and four after which is both more light in the evening than DST and a shorter workday because people are more productive than they ever have been.

            But I guess you would rather let business practices determine when noon is for everyone instead of the sun.

            • azertyfun@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              3 months ago

              Business hours is no more or less of a social construct than DST or the 24 hour clock.

              The only difference is that we have a shot at making everyone agree on a timezone shift or permanent DST, but absolutely NO SHOT at getting every business to switch to an 8-4 schedule. None. It’d be a nice sentiment. But it’s not happening, and I don’t care what the number says on the clock when I leave work as long as it’s sunny outside.

              Why is it so important that the sun reaches its zenith at noon anyway? Do you often get confused while looking at your antique sundial?

              • snooggums@midwest.social
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                3 months ago

                First of all, noon refers to when the sun is at the highest point in the sky so being an hour off is confusing.

                Being able to look at the general position of the sun and being able to estimate time is pretty handy.

                Being able to estimate the length of day because the time between sunrise and sunset being approximately the same is handy.

                Not changing the time of day twice a year would be fucking fantastic.

                Some places already stick with standard time all year round.

                The US tried year round DST in the 70s and it was widely rejected within a year because DST during the winter is fucking awful.

                Plus, most jobs don’t mind people coming in and leaving early, which is a far more common shift adjustment than coming in and staying late.

                Year round standard time is the real solution.

    • Scoopta@programming.dev
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      3 months ago

      From a development perspective it certainly sounds easier to have one global timezone with DST than a bunch of smaller ones without it. Would that make sense in reality? Probably not but I definitely think timezones take more work to compensate for properly.

      • hikaru755@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Not really. Timezones, at their core (so without DST or any other special rules), are just a constant offset that you can very easily translate back and forth between, that’s trivial as long as you remember to do it. Having lots of them doesn’t really make anything harder, as long as you can look them up somewhere. DST, leap seconds, etc., make shit complicated, because they bend, break, or overlap a single timeline to the point where suddenly you have points in time that happen twice, or that never happen, or where time runs faster or slower for a bit. That is incredibly hard to deal with consistently, much more so that just switching a simple offset you’re operating within.

      • alcoholicorn@lemmy.ml
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        3 months ago

        Lets just have 2 timezones, Chinese time and EST w/ permanent DST. The most populated timezones for Eurasia and the americas, and they’re both 12 hours apart.

        • Scoopta@programming.dev
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          3 months ago

          There was actually a really interesting idea I heard to have no time zones. And I actually think it could be a good idea. It’ll never happen because people would need to re-learn time but if it was always the same time everywhere it would make scheduling and business so much easier. No one would need to convert between different zones or be late because of an incorrect conversion. The downside is that times which are conventionally morning or evening etc, would no longer would be so people would have to get used to time just being a construct for scheduling and not a representation of the natural day/night cycle…but it actually doesn’t sound like a half bad idea.

          • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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            3 months ago

            Problem you run into is the areas where we need to tie things to solar days across an area.
            You end up with places having to regulate that school starts at 22:00, and gets out 05:00 the next day.
            Businesses close for the night at 06:00 and open bright and early later that day at 22:00.
            You have places where one calendar day has two different business days in it, so the annoyances faced by people who work overnight shifts spreads to everyone, and worse gets spread to financial calendars, billing systems and the works.

            It’s not better.

              • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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                3 months ago

                Time is an air bubble trapped under a screen protector. It’s annoying, and you can push it around to try to keep it out of the way, but you can never really fix it.
                There’s just too many inherently contradictory requirements for us to end up with a “good” system, and we just need to settle for good enough.

                My dream is that we stop changing things. Whatever we have in time zone database today is what we stick with going forwards. No more dst shifts, no more tweaks to the zones, no more weird offsets and shifts, because we don’t get to stop dealing with the old layout when we change, we just add a new one that we think is better.

                For the most part, dealing with this stuff is a solved, shitty problem. It’s when we change the rules that problems come up. Worse when we change them retroactively. (Territory disputes between nations have been resolved with the conclusion that land was actually in a different time zone in the past because it was actually in another country. Not a problem usually, unless there’s a major stock exchange in an island that was transferred between nations and retroactively changing what time it was affects what laws were valid at the time certain transactions took place.

      • fidodo@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        What matters is consistency and our time system has tons of crazy inconsistent shit in our. Everyone knows about leap years, but do you know about leap seconds? Imagine trying to write a function to convert unix time to a current date and suddenly all your times are a second off.

        Just look at this insane bullshit nonsense. The added complexity of time zones and daylight saving time is nothing compared to simply supporting our time system.

        • Gork@lemm.ee
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          3 months ago

          We need to synchronize all computer times with that one clock that can stay accurate to within 1 second every 40 billion years.

        • Nimrod@lemm.ee
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          3 months ago

          You are aware that the actual amount of daylight doesn’t change when we move the clock’s right?

          It really comes down to when you’d rather have more daylight, morning or evening.

          • Aux@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            Except that it doesn’t. Take a look at daylight data for 20 Dec here https://www.timeanddate.com/sun/uk/london

            Daylight: 08:03 - 15:53

            That’s ST obv. Now let’s convert it to DST, that will be 9:03 - 16:53. Let’s say you work a standard 9-5 job. Well, 9:03 is after you start working and 16:53 is before you finish. Thus you get ZERO daylight during the day in DST. You get almost an hour in the morning with ST.

            Now let’s move further away from equator https://www.timeanddate.com/sun/latvia/riga

            Daylight: 08:59 - 15:43

            Well, DST is a perma fucking depression now as you’re robbed from the very few minutes you had before.

            How about further North https://www.timeanddate.com/sun/finland/helsinki

            Daylight: 09:23 - 15:12

            No wonder Finland has such high suicide rates during winter…

            P.S. It is also worth noting that daylight grows the closer you get to the equator and it grows in the morning, not in the evening. You can see from the examples above that their evening difference is smaller than the morning one. There’s just no point having DST.

            • Nimrod@lemm.ee
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              3 months ago

              I’m missing your point. Do you think that moving the clocks is having an effect on the tilt of the earth? Or are you just trying to explain to me how daylength and latitude are related?

              I know quite well how dark it gets in the north. I live in the north. Luckily, the sun still rises and sets at very predictable intervals. If I want to enjoy sunlight, I simply need to be awake at some point that coincides with when the sun is up.

              You are also aware that not everyone works the exact same hours, right? And windows exist?

              Use a different example to make the opposite point: I’d like the sun to be out for at least an hour after I get home from my “9-5”, so if the sun sets at 1700 I’m standard time, I am depressed. But in DST, I get to spend an hour in my garden.

              See? The debate is stupid. Do you want more daylight in the morning or afternoon. That’s the only question. The amount of daylight is not affected by clocks.

              • Aux@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                Wut? If it’s DST during winter, you don’t have any light to enjoy after work. You can only enjoy light in the morning with ST. All the explanation is above, with facts.

    • Cosmic Cleric@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Love me some early evening daylight though. Nice warm but not hot cruise/drive with the windows and the top down on the car.

      • snooggums@midwest.social
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        3 months ago

        Which part of the year is DST and which part is Standard Time?

        I know, but it seems like half the people that say they prefer DST have it backwards.

        • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 months ago

          i still dont even understand what DST even is, as far as i care because i don’t is that DST just means we change the time, because god forbid the time be a little funky.

            • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              3 months ago

              too bad there isn’t like a standard convention that establishes when something would take effect, how it would take effect, and at what interval.

              No, daylight savings time is definitely what we’re going to call it.

        • scottywh@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          It’s easy, the good part is DST (which is what we’re currently in - Spring through Fall in the northern hemisphere).

          • Aux@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            It’s only good from spring to fall. Come winter and it’s a permanent depression.

            • Incandemon@lemmy.ca
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              3 months ago

              Strong disagree, under DST I get to experience some sunlight in then evenings. Under Standard time I get to watch the sun come up through the window and set through the window.

              • jdeath@lemm.ee
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                3 months ago

                just move somewhere better. don’t mess up my timezone just because your weather always sucks!

              • Aux@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                I don’t know what you mean by evening, but it’s already dark at 16:00 during winter. You only get some light in the morning. DST means no more light in the morning and no more light in the evening. Complete depression. DST should not exist.

              • Aux@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                With standard time you get some light in the morning. With DST you get no light at all. Also there’s nothing worse than waking up in the darkness.

              • jdeath@lemm.ee
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                3 months ago

                yeah it’s literally ass-backwards. how can anyone support DST as it stands is beyond me

      • mwguy@infosec.pub
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        3 months ago

        DST vsm Standard time literally doesn’t matter. It’s the switching between the two that kills people.

  • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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    3 months ago

    Cool, so sunrise is at 8 PM now. Or maybe there’s just no consistent relationship between what a clock on the East and West coast of America say, and a call can’t be scheduled between them.

    The real problem with time and date is that it has to fit social and natural systems as well as actual passage of time. A lot of nuance is unavoidable.

    • thanks_shakey_snake@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      Yeah, tbh the “no timezones” approach comes with its own basket of problems that isn’t necessarily better than the “with timezones” basket. The system needed to find a balance between being useful locally, but intelligible across regions. Especially challenging before ubiquitous telecommunications

      Imagine having to rethink the social norms around time every time you travel or meet someone from far away. They say “Oh I work a 9-to-5 office job” and then you need to figure out where they live to understand what that means. Or a doctor writes a book where they recommend that you get to bed by 2:00PM every night, and then you need to figure out how to translate that to a time that makes sense for you.

      We’d invent and use informal timezones anyway, and then we’d be writing Javascript functions to translate “real” times to “colloquial” times, and that’s pretty close to just storing datetimes in UTC then translating them to a relevant timezone ad hoc, which is what we’re already doing.

      That’s what my rational programmer brain says. My emotional programmer brain is exactly this meme.

      • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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        3 months ago

        My emotional brain thinks we should just give up and climb back into the trees.

        Funny enough, a story just broke about a lunar timezone, which would lose a second or so every year relative to Earth due to relativity. If space travel becomes a big thing we’re going to have to choose a frame of reference, and probably just go with Unix epoch in that frame as the universal time. Hopefully it doesn’t happen to pass through a black hole, because there’s no consistent way to define a frame of reference that’s not subject to gravity.

    • davidgro@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Yes! Very much so.

      This is a good illustration of exactly why timezones exist and the issues with not having them.

    • psud@aussie.zone
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      3 months ago

      China uses a single timezone where similar width countries use three or more. So some parts start the day at 8am, others start at 10am

      If we used a single timezone in the west it would be UTC which is practically on the other side of the world to me - I’m in +11 now, +10 when we go back to standard time in a week. That would make it reasonably easy here, the clock would be out by near enough to 12 hours (if you prefer light in the evening) that you’d be fine on a 12 hour clock just inverting am and pm

    • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      Cool, so sunrise is at 8 PM now.

      And the problem with that is… ?

      Or maybe there’s just no consistent relationship between what a clock on the East and West coast of America say, and a call can’t be scheduled between them.

      If you get rid of timezones they all say the same time, no? If you want to schedule a call you just say the time and save the timzone offset fiddling.

      The real problem with time and date is that it has to fit social and natural systems as well as actual passage of time.

      Can you give any more concrete examples? None come to mind beyond habit, which is not an immutable thing.

      • davidgro@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Here’s a quick essay about the problems with it.

        TL;DR - as long as people generally prefer to sleep when it’s dark and wake when it’s light (and they always will in general) time zones are basically needed as a form of lookup table for when to try to communicate with other places.

        • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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          3 months ago

          Well the essay has a lot to discuss, part of which is already (or will be) addressed up and down thread, so towards your TL;DR:

          Yes of course, I’m not suggesting to disrupt circadian rhythms. And yes, lookup tables for solar days will always be required, but I would argue this is an inherent complexity to how we measure time in relation to our behavioural patterns and environment. However doing that by using variously large timezones that do not quite match solar days at their edges anyway, with a lot of them changing their offsets by an hour for half the year, and some of them using half-hour offsets throughout the year, that is complexity added for administrative reasons which are partly obsolete and largely irrelevant to the question off what would benefit humanity as a whole the most.

          If everybody were to use one single timezone you would memorise your relative offset to noon/midnight pretty fast. Like it’s one number to remember, e.g. where you are 4:40am is noon, 4:40pm is midnight, your offset is -7:20. Having those times be (roughly) 12 (for half the year) is just tradition and something we have every child learn. We could teach them about solar offsets just as well. It’s not even really more complex, arguably much less so since you remove the need to confuse them with the chaos that global timezones have grown to be historically.

      • redcalcium@lemmy.institute
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        3 months ago

        It’s not that simple as people has this urge to associate 12pm to noon and 12am to midnight. Just look at china where the whole country is under a single timezone despite spanning from UTC+05:00 to UTC+09:00. People on xinjiang ended up using their own unofficial timezone (UTC+06:00) for their daily activities instead of using china’s official timezone (UTC+08:00) because it’s inconvenient to them.

        • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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          3 months ago

          people has this urge to associate 12pm to noon and 12am to midnight

          Yeah but that is exactly what I mean with habitual. It’s a learned association of questionable utility. It can be unlearned and replaced with 0400 is noon or 1600 is noon based on your longitude just as well. Dawn and dusk are dependent on latitude and have to be learned for anything not smack-dab on the equator anyway.

          I can see why that would be inconvenient to people, but I would maintain that is only so due to them clinging to a habit.

          • redcalcium@lemmy.institute
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            3 months ago

            It could be worse. What would happen on people that live in UTC+12:00 ? When your friend say “lets meet on Tuesday”, which Tuesday it is (because the day changes at noon)? People will resist such majorly inconvenience changes unless the benefit of switching is clear for them. Forcing unpopular changes will guarantee people using unofficial timezone which cause even more confusion down the line.

            • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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              3 months ago

              What would happen on people that live in UTC+12:00 ? When your friend say “lets meet on Tuesday”, which Tuesday it is (because the day changes at noon)?

              Given how +12 is at the front of the “date wave” currently they would probably take it to mean the Monday/Tuesday noon.

              People will resist such majorly inconvenience changes unless the benefit of switching is clear for them. Forcing unpopular changes will guarantee people using unofficial timezone which cause even more confusion down the line.

              Yeah fair. To me the benefit is clear, there is no good rhyme or reason to timezones as a totality, we should come up with a better system. A straightforward approach like using UTC offsets seems best.

          • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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            3 months ago

            They just gave an example though of people who made up their own timezone because the official one was bad.

            These systems exist for people and if no one other than programmers wants to do the internal calculus of “The sun is setting and they’re a quarter of the earths rotation Eastward, so that means they’re probably in bed” every time you want to call someone, then we shouldn’t make the standard that way.

            You also get some things that become way more complicated, like “send the user a notification at the start of the normal working day”.
            Right now you just look up the timezone in their profile and send it at 9:00, but without timezones, you need a “database of regional conventions for coordinating business hours”, which is just a worse way of having timezones.

            Timezones exist because they have a purpose. UTC exists because having some sort of coordinated universal time is helpful and people (outside of Greenwich) don’t use it because it isn’t helpful to them, except in specific circumstances.

            It’s like abolishing everything except latin1 because Unicode is a pain. Wanting to write your name in your traditional alphabet is just a habit that people can break.

            • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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              3 months ago

              They just gave an example though of people who made up their own timezone because the official one was bad.

              Yeah, and in reply I argued that they did this out of not wanting to change their habit of associating 12 o’clock with noon. Which is in my opinion an understandable impulse but not a good reason to preserve the status quo.

              These systems exist for people

              Yeah fair, I’m aware I’m toeing unpopular opinion territory here.

              and if no one other than programmers wants to do the internal calculus of “The sun is setting and they’re a quarter of the earths rotation Eastward, so that means they’re probably in bed” every time you want to call someone, then we shouldn’t make the standard that way.

              But the standard is like that right now, worse even with DST and other complexities.

              Right now you just look up the timezone in their profile and send it at 9:00, but without timezones, you need a “database of regional conventions for coordinating business hours”, which is just a worse way of having timezones.

              Well no you need an offset. Like the user has set +8:30 as their offset, so send the notification at 00:30 UTC. That’s not worse than having timezones, that’s having timezones but simpler.

              Timezones exist because they have a purpose.

              Yeah, and some of those purposes are bonkers.

              It’s like abolishing everything except latin1 because Unicode is a pain.

              More like getting everyone to use Unicode, but whatever. Like I said I see why it would be unpopular to the point of being unenforceable, but that doesn’t mean an unambiguous way of communicating time as the default would be entirely undesirable.

              • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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                3 months ago

                My point is we have that unambiguous system you want. People don’t use it except in specific circumstances. Instead of saying those people are wrong, you can look at why they don’t use UTC for everything.

                People don’t use UTC because people aren’t usually interested in universal time, they’re interested in time of day, which is fundamentally tied to the position of the sun and people’s day night cycles.
                The people in China who made their own bootleg timezone illustrate that perfectly.

                We don’t currently have to reason about where someone is physically located to know if they’re likely asleep. I’m in UTC-4. It’s 15:30. It’s 19:30 in London. I know the evening is advanced enough that I shouldn’t call my coworker there, but early enough that I can if it’s an emergency. I forgot California’s timezone, so I googled it, and it’s UTC-7, so it’s 12:30 there. I should probably wait half an hour to call to avoid the typical lunch hour.
                Otherwise I use a tool to look up and see that solar noon in California is around 20:00, so people are probably doing their midday routines then. Except that California shifted business hours so that they’re offset an hour from solar noon to reduce energy consumption, which I didn’t know.
                And what do we do about places like Texas where solar noon varies by more than an hour on different ends of the state? For simplicity, most regions like to synchronize working hours inside their contiguous economic sphere. So I can assume that the state would pass a law relating to what time was considered “convention”, since we need schools, businesses, banks and government services to be consistent inside a jurisdiction.
                It’s important we have stuff like that be uniform, because jurisdictions have laws about stuff like preventing teens from working during school hours, or preventing schools from starting class so early it interferes with children’s sleep or staying in session so long it interferes with their evenings.
                Texas can just mandate that standard business hours are 14:00 to 22:00.
                Thank God they didn’t end up having to mandate that the standard business day is split across two different calendar days like California. Imagine the hell of child labor laws when you have to stipulate that teens can’t work between the hours of 15:00 and 1:00 the next day unless said scheduled interval begins on a weekend.
                Business hours being posted as 00:00 - 03:00, 17:00-00:00 for things like Sandwich shops is my favorite though. “I closed for the night today at 3, but I’ll be open again later today in the morning at 17” just has a delightfully complicated inhuman ring to it.

                There’s a reason people like their days to line up with their days, and we like to base our clocks around how we live our lives where we are, not where the sun in in Greenwich.

                I fundamentally disagree that a system that’s identical to how we work with timezones but non-standard, like a UTC offset system you describe, is simpler than timezones, which are standardized UTC offsets. At best it’s timezones with a different name and more of them.

                Latin1 is far simpler than Unicode, and doesn’t have conversion issues. It’s static and very difficult to get wrong. It’s clearly a better match for comparison to UTC-only. It’s only downside is that it leaves everyone outside of a small segment of the worlds population to build their own janky system for dealing with their silly human need to reason about time in an intuitive sense/write their names.

      • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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        3 months ago

        And the problem with that is… ?

        Subjective. It seems like it would be a bit confusing, though, if you had to relearn times whenever you travel somewhere. But maybe you’d prefer that.

        If you get rid of timezones they all say the same time, no?

        Before they were invented, it was literally just anarchy. People set it to match people they knew. That’s what I was thinking of, but it could also just be one place where noon is at 12:00 PM.

        Can you give any more concrete examples? None come to mind beyond habit, which is not an immutable thing.

        Well, there’s not a round number of second in a day, or days in a year, for example, since they’re all naturally occurring and arbitrary. And then the Earth turns at a subtly non-constant rate, and people have settled on a seven day week. If you do have timezones, it doesn’t make sense to be inflexible with them when they run up against geography or trade and cultural ties, so they’ll be curvy, and geopolitics will itself change over decades and someone will want to change which one they’re in. All of this is a headache if you just want to do a calendar calculation.

        • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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          3 months ago

          It seems like it would be a bit confusing, though, if you had to relearn times whenever you travel somewhere (edit: and dates could flip over in the middle of a work day). But maybe you’d prefer that.

          I’d prefer that over having to change clocks when you travel, and having to have knowledge about the location and possibly having to flip the date when you encounter a reference to a specific time, yes.

          Before they were invented, it was literally just anarchy. People set it to match people they knew. That’s what I was thinking of, but it could also just be one place where noon is at 12:00 PM.

          Yes, you would obviously do the latter. No sense it going back to the bad old days.

          Well, there’s not a round number of second in a day, or days in a year, for example, since they’re all naturally occurring and arbitrary.

          Days in a year ok (except leap years). But seconds in a day are round (discounting days with leap seconds). 24 * 60 * 60 = 86400, which is divisible by two. Did you mean they are not based on the decimal system? I’d be up for a decimal based time system and a reorganised calendar, but that wasn’t the topic of discussion here.

          And then the Earth turns at a subtly non-constant rate, and people have settled on a seven day week.

          Yeah but none of that has much impact on the timezone debate.

          If you do have timezones, it doesn’t make sense to be inflexible with them when they run up against geography or trade and cultural ties, so they’ll be curvy, and geopolitics will itself change over decades and someone will want to change which one they’re in.

          Fair enough. I acknowledged this point in my other post, that there are historical reasons for timezones mostly rooted in administrative requirements. But I don’t think this is a good reason to not adopt a better system per se.

          All of this is a headache if you just want to do a calendar calculation.

          Exactly! So out with the old, in with the new. Sure this will create some other headaches, especially given how deeply rooted some of the relevant nomenclature is in most languages, but the sooner we change this the less it will hurt. I see that it might be a non-starter given the inertia and disunity of globalised society working against it, but it still seems desirable nonetheless, to me at least.

      • NeatNit@discuss.tchncs.de
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        3 months ago

        And the problem with that is… ?

        The problem is that the date changes in the middle of the day. 00:00 (“midnight”) should occur around the middle of the night, so that one day (sunrise to sunset) has a single date assigned to it.

        In my opinion it would make more sense to set 00:00 at slightly before sunrise (roughly 4:00 by my clock), that way one night “belongs” to the day that preceded it. But for whatever reason they decided that the date changes in the middle of the night. That’s fine. Middle of the day would not be fine.

        Edit: hey cool, Japan kinda agrees with me! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date_and_time_notation_in_Japan#Time

        • eatCasserole@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Anyone who works nights, or an evening job that runs late like a bar or something, is currently used to having the date change in the middle of their “day”. I don’t think it’s really that big of a deal. It would be super weird at first, but kids who grew up with it would find our current system just as bananas as we would find this.

          • NeatNit@discuss.tchncs.de
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            3 months ago

            Yeah but you still mentally consider it to be the same day as the preceding day, until you go to sleep. (Unless you stay up all night but that’s very uncommon, my sympathy to night shift workers)

            If the date changes in the middle of the day, does that make the latter half of the day “tomorrow” from the first half? That’s absurd to me.

        • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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          3 months ago

          The fact that you give a preference to change something here which you give as an example for something that shouldn’t be changed because it would be problematic is deeply ironic to me.

          Also, again, I don’t really see the problem with changing the date in the middle of the day. It’s virtually the same as changing it at 00:00 or 04:00, you change the date once every 24 hours. Right now you have a situation where one persons 3rd of the month could be another persons 2nd or 4th, depending on where on the globe they are. That’s not really ideal either, especially for that call scheduling example by the GP.

          • NeatNit@discuss.tchncs.de
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            3 months ago

            Don’t you think it makes sense for the date to change while ~everyone is asleep?

            International light-speed communication is what we internet dwellers are used to but it’s not most people’s experience. Most people rarely talk to people from another continent.

            • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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              Oh don’t get me wrong, I see how it makes sense. I’m just saying that 1) it is arbitrary nonetheless and 2) it doesn’t outweigh the benefits that could be gained by using a single global timezone. Incidence angle of solar radiation is hardly something most people need or even want to track beyond a certain degree (dawn, noon, dusk, midnight), and the times that would coincide with at your latitude and longitude can be easily learned.

              • NeatNit@discuss.tchncs.de
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                3 months ago

                I guess I disagree about the benefits of a single global timezone. We already have that for technology to use - the unix timestamp. All potential benefits of a unified timezone could be (and are) gained by having software convert times to whichever timezone you need.

                Maybe I’m missing something. What do you think the benefits would be?

                • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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                  3 months ago

                  We already have that for technology to use - the unix timestamp.

                  A unix timestamp is an offset to a UTC date, not a timezone. But fair enough, there is UTC. It’s not used by default however, except by scientists and programmers maybe.

                  Maybe I’m missing something. What do you think the benefits would be?

                  Removing ambiguity from casual language. Currently when you state a time you are almost always implying your local timezone applies, which might be unknown information to the recipient, especially with written sources like these comments here. With everybody using the same timezone instead you would always make an unambiguous statement about the specific time by default.

  • someguy3@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Ok so there are 24 time zones. Before that every town had their own time based on the sun. We basically went from infinity time zones down to 24. This is in fact simpler.

    (There are some half hour time zones too,(India, Newfoundland) so at least 26.)

    • zaphod@sopuli.xyz
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      3 months ago

      There are a few time zones that are 45 minutes off, like Nepal Standard Time which is UTC+5:45, some places in Western Australia and South Australia use UTC+08:45 and the Chatham Islands are at UTC+12:45 or UTC+13:45 in summer.

      • DST means you also have things like CST vs CET and given some places start DST earlier or later than others and some ignore it all together, we probably have at least 50 time zones.

        Always fun trying to schedule international regular meetings when suddenly there’s a week when half the people’s times changed and the other half’s times haven’t yet, so you try to figure out which time would exclude the fewest essential people.

  • steeznson@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    The UK press every year makes a huge song and dance in opinion pieces about getting rid of DST. However I’m always horrified to see that people want us to keep British Summer Time instead of Grenwich Mean Time. I understand that there are “longer evenings” in BST; however we literally invented GMT and coerced the rest of the world to adjust their times based on that. From the point of view of being constantly compatible with UTC and having more consistent business hours for international companies it makes more sense to me if we kept GMT.

    Also the longer evenings thing can be achieved by simply staying up an hour later. It’s not exactly like an hour is being stolen from you when the times switch, the change of clocks are mainly pointless admin.

    Lastly I read an article recently that described a correlation between the incidence of heart attacks and the clocks changing. The theory is that just slightly messing with people’s sleeping patterns can cause additional strain on the body.

    • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Another point for GMT, in the mid '70s, the US went onto DST year round for a couple years. People hated it so much they changed back to switching the time.

      If we wanna do away with DST and BST, we need to go back to standard time, as the later sunset in the summer translates to no sunlight for workers in the winter

    • somethingp@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      No the longer evenings are achieved by work starting and ending an hour earlier. And it’s literally easier to change the time zone than to change corporate culture.

      • steeznson@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        So would you be team BST if we had to pick one? I’m just personally not sure it’s such a loss when the sun is out until 10pm at the height of summer.

        Edit: to be honest that would probably be my 2nd preference. Anything except the system we have now where the clocks change!

        • somethingp@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          I think I want work to end an hour earlier in the winter because of how early the sun sets, and care much less about the summer. So however it’s done, it would be great if office jobs could happen when it’s dark outside and we could live our lives during daylight.

    • TechNom (nobody)@programming.dev
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      3 months ago

      Leap years are not as bad as timezones, if you think about it. Timezones try to imperfectly solve a local problem - how to match your clock with the position of the sun. Leap years try to reasonably solve a global problem - how to keep your calendar aligned with the seasons.

  • _NoName_@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    I’ve just said 'fuck it’s and switched all my clocks to UTC. I don’t even care anymore.

  • YTG123@sopuli.xyz
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    3 months ago

    Before timezones and trains, each town has its own natural time (based on the sun or whatever). Would you have preferred that?

  • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    I just discovered that while the ServiceNow APIs return all times in UTC, they use the user’s default time for all times passed in as a parameter.

    So if your account is set up in PDT and you say “give me this item that I just created”, it will say “here your item, this was created at 17:00”.

    But if you say, “cool let me see all items created in the last hour, so anything greater than 16:00”, then it will respond “got nothing for ya, chief.”

  • jabjoe@feddit.uk
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    3 months ago

    The only code with timezones should be the bit squishy meat bags touch. Everything’s is should be UNIX time. Or it you are unfortunate enough to be on Windows, NT time.

    Some unfortunate programmers already have to deal with the speed of time not being a constant. In a distant future, timestamps might always have a universal position (and speed), and is that much different from timezones?

    Or we find some way of removing time distortion of physics. Find the universe’s real systick. 😃

    • Zannsolo@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      No UTC. Convert/use UTC on the way in and covert to local time for the user or local time of the noun the date is for in the display.