But did you get payed for the extra hour?The bar where I work is open until 3am. As a result of DST, we stayed open for an extra hour tonight, which people enjoyed. Plus it's a whole extra hour for me to make tips!
Of course. Why wouldn't I?
But did you get payed for the extra hour?The bar where I work is open until 3am. As a result of DST, we stayed open for an extra hour tonight, which people enjoyed. Plus it's a whole extra hour for me to make tips!
Not really "most" people. Just a few vocal guys.but running a country on the same time 365 day a year would certainly be highly appreciated by most people.
I call bullshit on that. Maybe it takes you 2 months because you spend the time moaning and grinding your teeth about it. If it takes you 8 weeks to adjust to 1 hour change, what will happen if you take a plane across the planet? Die from retroactive sleep deprivation?Personally, I take about 2 months to adjust to DST
Given that in the modern world beside (maybe) farmers people waking up and going to sleep has nothing to do with the sun, I call bullshit on that, too.German researchers have found that the human body never adjusts to DST. http://abcnews.go.com/m/story?id=4509150
Waking up early, I realized there is a reason why we need daylight saving time. It's what happens in the morning, not necessarily at night. I like that it stays light later in daylight time, but the week leading up to the roll back, it doesn't really get light in the morning until after 7:00 AM. Do we really want to go to work or school with it still being dark? I know I don't, and the light does help me wake up in the morning.
Data isn't going far enough.
No dst, no timezones.
One clock globally.
Fuck the sun.
German researchers have found that the human body never adjusts to DST. http://abcnews.go.com/m/story?id=4509150
That sounds like a pretty amazing coincidence for a supposed natural phenomenon, considering that the 360-degree circle, the 24-hour day and the division of the Earth by lines of latitude and longitude are all purely arbitrary cultural constructs.People's circadian rhythm -- the body's internal clock -- follows the sun and changes depending on where you live. It actually changes in four-minute intervals, exactly the time it takes for the sun to cross one line of longitude, Roenneberg explained.
Eh, I've heard reports and studied done that show that the time change does have an impact on people. In some cases the time change causes people the next day to act no different than if they were hungover just because their internal clock is messed up. Now it doesn't *last* and usually the person adjusts in a day or two but losing an hour of sleep (as we do when we spring-forward) or the sun setting too early certainly has an impact. Hell it's only 8:00 where I live and I'm already tired because I "feel" like it's 9:00.
That'd be news to the people who live closer to the Canadian border than you do (there are some). There are some towns that are actually on the border (as in the border runs through it).I'm 50-60 miles as the crow flies from the Canadian border. It's hard to live in the continental US and be much further north than me. The closest major city to here is Winnipeg which isn't even in the same country.
Springing ahead is far worse than falling back.
That'd be news to the people who live closer to the Canadian border than you do (there are some). There are some towns that are actually on the border (as in the border runs through it).I'm 50-60 miles as the crow flies from the Canadian border. It's hard to live in the continental US and be much further north than me. The closest major city to here is Winnipeg which isn't even in the same country.
Hmm, in this post I'm missing evidence for the "gentleman" bit in your sig. Just because you disagree you needn't be rude.I call bullshit on that. Maybe it takes you 2 months because you spend the time moaning and grinding your teeth about it. If it takes you 8 weeks to adjust to 1 hour change, what will happen if you take a plane across the planet? Die from retroactive sleep deprivation?Personally, I take about 2 months to adjust to DST
we've only had DST 25 years now and it's just one huge nuissance. It was introduced in order to save electricity but it's utter b-shit. The light you save in the evening is needed in the morning instead. And all this clock-switching, trains having to wait 1 hour to be back on time again etc costs actually more money than it saves.
It's not a matter of disagreeing, it's a matter of lying. Disagreament means that both parts hold a reasonable position. Two months to deal with 1-hour shift? That doesn't pass the smell test. So I reserve my consideration for people who do not make stuff up to argue their point.Hmm, in this post I'm missing evidence for the "gentleman" bit in your sig. Just because you disagree you needn't be rude.I call bullshit on that.Personally, I take about 2 months to adjust to DST
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