• atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works
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    12 hours ago

    I am a champion of the idea of keeping daylight saving over standard time but I am more and more starting to think that the time change is the best compromise we are going to get with the people who insist on getting to work at 8am in the light.

    • Sludgeyy@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      Let’s look at NY city.

      June 21th longest day, sunrise is at 5:24 am (Set 8:31 pm)

      December 21th longest night, sunrise is at 6:42 am (Set 4:32 pm)

      If you got rid of daylight savings time then the sun would rise at 4:24 am in June and set at 7:31 pm.

      (Most people in NY probably want the extra hour of light at 7:31 pm instead of 4:24 am)

      If you kept permanent daylight savings then the sun would rise at 7:42 am in December and set at 5:32 pm)

      (Most people in NY probably want some light before 8 because it’s going to be dark after dinner anyways)

      So many people are awake before 8 am compared to 5 am

      So many people enjoy the light at 7:30 pm in the summer

      Switching really is the sweet spot for NY

      Location is definitely important too in hating or liking DST

      Ontonagon, Mi sun sets at 5:25 pm tonight (7:58 am rise)

      Dexter, Me sun sets at 4:10 pm tonight (6:33 am rise)

      Same time zone, both northern cities.

      If we didn’t get off DST Ontonagon wouldn’t see the sunrise until almost 9 am today

      People in Dexter might have preferred to stay on DST getting light between 7:33 am to 5:10 pm today

      The farther west you live in a time zone the less you like DST generally. Farther east, the more you like it.

      Ontonagon is so west it should really be in Central Time zone.

      If that was the case then the sun would set at 4:25 pm tonight (6:58 am rise) (basically Dexter ME times)

      At that point they might want to stay on DST and it would make it exactly what it was today, sunset at 5:25 pm tonight (7:58 am rise)

    • mos@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      I just think humans don’t work well with such a sudden change even just 1 hr. Maybe there’s a way we could add/remove a minute every day over two months or something lol

        • mos@lemmy.world
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          1 hour ago

          As I was typing it I was trying to figure out how it would work on electronic devices and my head exploded. Let alone just your everyday clock.