I get a kick out of year-round DST people claiming it would be light at 9pm in January though.
For a month I will have to listen to every show on my favorite online radio station an hour later because the station is in England.It occurs to me, when reading that, that even year-round Standard Time would create an offset for half the year from the other countries in the four time zones that cover the continental U.S. That would be all but three of the Canadian provinces, Cuba and the other Caribbean nations, and most of Chile (excluding the southernmost three states).
I don't think there is a solution that would eliminate the problem completely.
When an Arizona station still had a big band show, I would miss the first hour for half the year.Taking the well-known example of Phoenix, which (as noted) observes PST year-round, sunset in that month fell between 5:31pm and 5:59pm.
For a month I will have to listen to every show on my favorite online radio station an hour later because the station is in England.
Most of the music is pretty much the same but there are some shows that are different that I want to hear.
When an Arizona station still had a big band show, I would miss the first hour for half the year.
are you sure we don't gain an hour? i mean the pattern change to directional will happen an hour later......lose an hour of the lounge music on 1110!
are you sure we don't gain an hour? i mean the pattern change to directional will happen an hour later...
that extra hour of sunlight sure helps my tomato plants.
In the case of the English station, I have to continue doing other things on the same schedule as before. That means bedtime is at the time it always is, but for several weeks I will have an hour less after one particular show is over to do other stuff. And I will have to wait an hour for other specific shows.I'm sorry, Chimp, but I fail to understand why you couldn't adjust to the time change that has existed for your entire life. Am I missing something relevant here?
Do you actually think I don't know what Daylight Saving Time is? C'mon man.No, we lose an hour. At 2:00am Standard Time it becomes 3:00am Daylight Time.
I know, because I had to allow for that in MusicMaster.
"Spring ahead" means lose an hour. "Fall back" means repeat one.
Gosh darn it, don't you just hate it when a station's schedule won't follow yours. I would suggest sending them an email letting them about the inconvenience, along with the exact times in your life schedule, so they can plan appropriately.In the case of the English station, I have to continue doing other things on the same schedule as before. That means bedtime is at the time it always is, but for several weeks I will have an hour less after one particular show is over to do other stuff. And I will have to wait an hour for other specific shows.
For the Arizona station, its big band show started while church was still going on.
I realize you're being facetious, but I think he makes a point. It's certainly not the station's fault; it's nobody's. Both the US and the UK go from Standard time to Daylight time. They just choose a different date to do it. So, from March 6 to March 29, our eastern time zone is no longer the UTC -5 that we're accustomed to, but rather UTC -4. Sure, it's up to any listener to tune in to whatever they want to listen to, but as he mentioned he has prior plans during that time.Gosh darn it, don't you just hate it when a station's schedule won't follow yours. I would suggest sending them an email letting them about the inconvenience, along with the exact times in your life schedule, so they can plan appropriately.
Then I'm at a lost for offering suggestions. If these are scheduled 'shows', does the online station offer on demand/podcasts? If it's appointment listening, that's almost necessary these days.I realize you're being facetious, but I think he makes a point. It's certainly not the station's fault; it's nobody's. Both the US and the UK go from Standard time to Daylight time. They just choose a different date to do it. So, from March 6 to March 29, our eastern time zone is no longer the UTC -5 that we're accustomed to, but rather UTC -4. Sure, it's up to any listener to tune in to whatever they want to listen to, but as he mentioned he has prior plans during that time.
No. People requested that.Then I'm at a lost for offering suggestions. If these are scheduled 'shows', does the online station offer on demand/podcasts? If it's appointment listening, that's almost necessary these days.
Geesh. When I worked in TV in Indiana before they started observing DST, twice a year we had to adjust a lot of things we did, including recording satellite feeds, and during DST, tape delaying all (or at least most) network programming (not easy in the 90s). But, we did.I'm sorry, Chimp, but I fail to understand why you couldn't adjust to the time change that has existed for your entire life. Am I missing something relevant here?
I wouldn't mind doing away with "spring ahead" and "fall back" but putting us on year-round Daylight Savings Time would offset us by one hour from Canada, Mexico, and South America half of the year.
And then there's Arizona and Hawaii, which do not honor DST, which is their legal right. You tell them we're taking that decision away from them ... I wouldn't deliver that message if it were at the end of a ten-foot pole.
Any state can opt out of DST at any time with no federal approval. They can't go on year-round DST, that would take federal legislation. I get a kick out of year-round DST people claiming it would be light at 9pm in January though.
I've had to wonder how that worked in Indiana for half of the year, and how it might have affected viewers of Indiana stations in adjacent states that did observe DST. Far southwestern Michigan that received South Bend stations, and that part of Ohio from Lima to points west, that received Fort Wayne stations, immediately come to mind. Ditto parts of Indiana that relied upon Dayton, Cincinnati, and Louisville stations.Geesh. When I worked in TV in Indiana before they started observing DST, twice a year we had to adjust a lot of things we did, including recording satellite feeds, and during DST, tape delaying all (or at least most) network programming (not easy in the 90s). But, we did.