Samoa Scraps Daylight Saving Time 159
Samoa is joining Japan, India, and China in scrapping daylight saving time, which was first proposed in 1895 so entomologist and astronomer George Hudson could study insects at night. "Hudson is dead, so daylight saving is no longer necessary," writes Mark Frauenfelder via BoingBoing. "It's time for the rest of the world to wake up and do the same." Time and Date reports: "The Ministry hereby advises that the Daylight Saving Time (DST) policy has ceased as per Cabinet Decision [...]. There will be no activation of the Daylight Saving Time policy for this year." The announcement (PDF) came from the Government of Samoa on September 20, 2021, following a decision made by Samoa's new Government Cabinet on September 15, 2021. DST was implemented in 2010 by the previous Government of Samoa to give more time after work to tend to their plantations, promote public health, and save fuel. Instead, it "[...] defeated its own goals by being used by people to socialize more," according to the Samoa Observer.
no fuxjing way (Score:2)
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DST ends here next weekend.
FTFY
Re:no fuxjing way (Score:5, Informative)
Unless s/he lives on the southern hemisphere.
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Good call, my mistake.
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Why does everyone keep picking on those who live on the equator, as if they're views are irrelevant!
FFS (Score:2, Insightful)
You do realise that all DST does is fool you into getting up an hour earlier? What fscking difference does it make if its DST and you get up at 5.30 or its normal time and you get up at 4.30?? Its still the same actual time!
Jesus, some people are thick.
Re: FFS (Score:3, Insightful)
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No person is an island, but society doesn't march in absolute lock step either.
And no, its not better to have an hour at the end if it means there's an hour of extra darkness in the morning with half asleep drivers mixing with kids going to school (who also don't want to get up because its still dark).
Re: FFS (Score:5, Informative)
But DST makes the time of dawn more consistent and less variable over the course of the year. See the first graph here [gaisma.com] to see how it works.
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Why's that a good thing? During DST an extra hour of morning light is effectively wasted.
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No, DST acutally saves one hour of daylight in the morning (and makes it available in the evening).
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Yeah, thats right, the earth stops rotating for an hour. Whatever.
Re: FFS (Score:2)
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But DST makes the time of dawn more consistent and less variable over the course of the year.
But skews noon when the sun should be at it's highest point and cast the smallest shadow.
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Except that time zones screw that up even without DST. Even if time zones were uniform, half of the locations in that zone would be at least 15 minutes off from true solar time. But time zones are not uniform in some cases you can actually be an hour off of solar time or more. There has always been a very rough approximation of time ever since we've had time zones and the ability to travel long distances quickly.
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But it makes the noon time less consistent, which is a problem for figuring out when you're going to be outside in the brightest part of the day and need to apply or reapply sunscreen. I have no data on this, but I bet if we looked into it, we would find a small enhancement to skin cancers correlating to areas with DST.
Changes in latitudes... [Re: FFS] (Score:4, Insightful)
But DST makes the time of dawn more consistent and less variable over the course of the year. See the first graph here [gaisma.com] to see how it works.
Depends on latitude. There is a band of latitudes where the time change to DST makes the time of dawn more consistent. If you're outside of that band toward the equator, no, it makes the time of dawn more variable. And if you're outside of that band toward the pole, the variability is so large that the one hour change is irrelevant.
Re: Changes in latitudes... [Re: FFS] (Score:2)
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Typically, countries near the equator don't bother with DST, AFAIK, because there is no need to use it.
Well, the article we're discussing is about Samoa, ~14 degrees S latitude.
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But DST makes the time of dawn more consistent and less variable over the course of the year. See the first graph here [gaisma.com] to see how it works.
The length of daylight actually varies greatly on latitude. Take a look for American Fork, Utah [gaisma.com]. The time with daylight varies by over three hours. Dawn varies from 5:20 to 7:30.
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Re: FFS (Score:2)
I disagree. Iâ(TM)d much rather the clocks go forward another hour at the end of next month to double DST and give us sunset at 17:45 instead of 15:45 in winter. Due to breakfast club, my son already goes to school in the dark. The light in the morning comes too late, and even so, weâ(TM)re rushing around too much to appreciate it. Thereâ(TM)s something relaxing about finishing work in day light, even if itâ(TM)s momentary. The end of DST is just brutal and marks a time of darkness
Re: FFS (Score:2)
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I understand your point, but I think this coordination is actually a bad thing. Let's take your stereotypical office worker: they work 8-5, with an hour lunch break from 12-1. They need to go to the bank, which has typical office hours. They cannot unless they take time off work. They have the same problem, if they need a plumber to fix something in their house, or a hundred other situation. In other words, things are overly coordinated.
I think WFH has shown this even more. Aside from specifically schedul
Re: FFS (Score:2)
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Get your lazy ass out of bed earlier and stop wasting the day.
Re: FFS (Score:2)
Get your lazy ass out of bed earlier So if the summer sun is out for 18 hours i get 6 hours sleep? Sorry, I gotta have at least 8.
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Not so. Time is coordinated and society is organised around it. No person is an island. With coordinated time, it's one in, all in because waiting an hour here or there is wasteful. DST is good because it is better to have an hour of daylight at the end of the day than it is to spend an hour of daylight in bed at the start.
Yes, time is coordinated and society is organized around it but mainly between 9 and 5. The question of where this hour of sunlight is best served is more a matter of personal opinion. The "day" is always in daylight . The only time it makes a difference is whether you are an early bird or a night owl. If you allow your body to follow the natural cycle of day and night, DST will make little difference since you can meet all of societies time obligations. There is this drive in some people to structure the d
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No, society is organized around the idea of socializing and entertainment outside of work. Sports, theatre, dinner with friends, societies of common interest, etc. Those are all evening activities, commonly held from 7-10pm in many societies, much later in other societies. DST at many latitudes allows those activities to occur without sacrificing daylight or sleep at the other end of the spectrum.
I'm all in favor of keeping DST permanently. In my latitudes, in the middle of winter, most people go to wor
Re: FFS (Score:5, Insightful)
As a programmer, DST offends me. Once a year there is a whole hour that is repeated twice (around 1 am) where anything logged in local time without a DST indicator can't be mapped to a single time in UTC. Don't think it's a big deal? There are lot of devices used 24 hours per day in factories that don't include a DST indicator. There are also times when I want to subtract one date from another date and I want to assume the difference is a multiple of 24 hours, when it may not actually be. Managers want to compare productivity per day and productivity per hour, and I have to deal with the fact that one day a year has 23 hours, and one has 25, or once a year there's an hour with 120 minutes worth of work time in it. It's a stupid amount of extra work. And converting back and forth to UTC all the time really sucks.
Lots of businesses post summer hours to deal with seasonal variability. If you want your workers to arrive an hour earlier and go home an hour later, just change the shift start and end times based on time of year. Heck, make a law that says all factories and store times must change to an hour earlier on a certain spring date, and change back in the fall. That's fine. But don't change the damned clocks.
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I work in physical security, it's a bloody nightmare to try to figure out if an event is affected by DST (Nevada except the Navajo reservation, South Africa) or not (Arizona, Argentina), and gods help us somewhere like Brasil where they've skipped it the last two years but will probably do it again next year.
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It's a more complicated issue than it first appears; with DST you gain some things and lose others. Summertime DST is a huge win for outdoor leisure; in the 1980s the golf industry engineered a nationwide extension of DST from 6 moths to 7. On the other hand, indoor recreation industries like television are harmed by summer DST.
Switching to and from DST comes with twice annual clock changes which everyone hates. Places have tried year-round DST, but people hated going to work in the dark. If you go year-
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DST is good because it is better to have an hour of daylight at the end of the day than it is to spend an hour of daylight in bed at the start.
You think it is good because it is good for you because you like it. It sucks for me and I hate it. And, your personal convenience has a cost: increased heart attacks [businessinsider.com], an increase in car wrecks [healthline.com], and an increase in work place accidents [reliableplant.com]. Daylight savings time is bad for people's health [arrowheadgrp.com].
Also, spending an hour of daylight in bed in the morning saves more energy than having an hour of extra light at the end of the day. Most people are inside by the time that extra hour has come around because it's time for di
Re: FFS (Score:2)
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You can make the same argument coordinated *standard* time. Standard time "fools" the people in Terre Haute Indiana into getting up at the same time as people in Machias Maine do, even though it's an hour and eighteen minutes earlier *local time*.
Standard time is just a convention adopted for economic convenience. Until railroads made coordinating clocks across large geographic areas useful, every town observed its own local time, which is why the most important building in every town traditionally had a c
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Try Brasil, where the entire country is one time zone.
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The same for *China*. It's all on Beijing time, including the parts of China bordering *India*, over 40 degrees to the west.
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Try Brasil, where the entire country is one time zone.
Yeah but they don't do time schedules, so it doesn't matter. You can insist on hour:minute all you want, but people only hear "today," "tomorrow," "next week."
Re: FFS (Score:2)
I never understood the incessant whining about time change. Its not like there arent a thousand other things in your life to throw off your
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You do realise that all DST does is fool you into getting up an hour earlier? What fscking difference does it make if its DST and you get up at 5.30 or its normal time and you get up at 4.30?? Its still the same actual time!
Not if you have to be at work at 6:30.
Jesus, some people are thick.
Quite.
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"Not if you have to be at work at 6:30."
Hint - get to work at 5.30 instead. It'll be the same actual time.
"Quite."
Good to see you looked in the mirror.
Re:no fuxjing way (Score:5, Informative)
Yea, the problem though is that is a very real psychosomatic effect that, in order to work, causes enough of a spike in your blood pressure to create a statistically conspicuous spike in stroke and heart attack deaths. Argue for any wake-up time you want, fine, but changing the clocks twice a year is literally killing people. I don't think enough people like this for the market to bear the real cost if the market only realized what that is.
Re: no fuxjing way (Score:2)
Well that settles it (Score:2)
As Samoa goes, so goes the rest of those tiny islands. Or something.
But I am alive and I still want to study insects at night - so Daylight Saving Time stays! Discussion closed.
Re:Well that settles it (Score:5, Insightful)
DST doesn't make sense for countries in the tropics, even in the most optimistic implementation.
Re: Well that settles it (Score:3)
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Brasil maybe, but Argentina goes all the way down to the 55th parallel south. There's a LOT of difference in the length of the day there!
staying power (Score:4, Insightful)
DST is a fine example of how resilient even the most nonsensical nonsense can be once it's been governmend approved and would need a majority to be revoked. And how governments are constructed to create new laws, but not to scrap old ones.
IMHO every law needs an end date at which it gets either renewed or will automatically end.
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Ooh, I can see the defense:
"Your honor, the law about not killing other people had expired at the time my client performed the deed, and that was not discovered and renewed until two days later."
Re: staying power (Score:4, Funny)
not discovered and renewed until two days later Yep, thank fuck laws are not SSL root certificates.
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I didn't make a statement about how long in the future the expiry date can be.
Plus you'd think that the first thing this principle would create is an office in the government whose job it is to track laws and when they expire. This would be quite public information and would not go unnoticed.
It's not like the law against murder would suddenly disappear. You'd know today that it will come up for renewal in five, ten or fifty years.
Re:staying power (Score:5, Insightful)
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"Murder should be outlawed" may not be controversial, but the definition of murder certainly is: look at ongoing debates/arguments/protests over abortion and euthanasia in many countries. Besides which, the whole point of mandatory sunset clauses is to have regular scrutiny of the entire statute book. If the legislature is going to renew bills with a few seconds' scrutiny, why bother with mandatory sunset clauses?
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Sunsetting laws would make things worse. As well as reducing certainty for business (regulations), it would end up being mostly hand-waved through by disinterested politicians who didn't check the amendments, much like the omnibus bills are now.
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You're proposing a model that would work if it weren't run by corrupt humans.
That scenario is impossible.
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I fully believe that someone could probably run for president on the sole platform plank of getting rid of Daylight Savings Time and have a pretty good chance at winning.
India?? (Score:2)
India has never had DST. Clocks are not shifted at all. Entire country follows one time (IST) throughout the year (GMT + 5h 30m )
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Apparently India had DST from 1941 to 1945. Rather, it was just Calcutta!
https://www.timeanddate.com/ti... [timeanddate.com]
Scroll down to India. :)
News to me too!
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it was part of the British Empire, India wasn't an independent country then. The headline makes it appear as if India scrapped daylight saving now
Re: India?? (Score:2)
Samoa is close to the equator (Score:4, Insightful)
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Just do it (Score:2)
It does matter which one we choose (Score:4, Informative)
Re: It does matter which one we choose (Score:2)
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DST in tropical lattitudes (Score:5, Insightful)
DST makes no sense full stop (Score:2)
It doesn't magically create extra hours of daylight. If you want to work during the day and finish when its light then get up and go to work earlier (admittedly this doesn't work if you have kids who have to go to school...) and finish earlier. Most reasonable companies allow flexible working now.
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"Well, in reality it does create an extra hour of daylight."
No, it doesn't. You're just trying to justify your laziness.
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No, it doesn't.
It does if you have any friends and/or a job.
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Well, in reality it does create an extra hour of daylight.
In reality, there is however much daylight there is, and the time is a number that we assign to it. And we could have seasonal hours (and many businesses in fact do) and not need DST at all.
Re: DST makes no sense full stop (Score:2)
Re: DST makes no sense full stop (Score:3)
Most do not have seasonal hours exactly because there is the stupidity of DST.
All you need is winter/summer hours for businesses and schools and that's it. DST is idiotic.
We don't like the schedule as we lose a lot of the daytime by waking up to late, what should we do, change the schedule? Nooo, let's change time itself!!!!
I shudder just thinking at the millions of software dev man-hours spent supporting this craziness. Just in my company, only senior devs touch code that have to do with timings on subscri
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Re: DST makes no sense full stop (Score:2)
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Most workers do not get to control their own schedules.
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"It doesn't magically create extra hours of daylight."
Well, yes, it does. If I get up at 6 AM and sunrise is at 5 AM standard time, daylight savings time gives me an extra hour of daylight I would've slept through. That's the point.
Re: DST makes no sense full stop (Score:2)
DST is a relic from when most business was effectively timed around "bankers hours" and "government hours." Since those hours were often set by various forms of Legislation and Regulation trying to change them was a legal nightmare so we just changed the Legal Time instead. There is very little these days which needs to be tied to those hours, and most businesses set their hours based on custome
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"DST is a relic from when most business was effectively timed around "bankers hours" and "government hours." "
And it still is. Maybe somewhat less than it used to be, but most places of business and government keep set hours.
Re:DST in tropical lattitudes (Score:4, Informative)
No, DST does not work great. Except for a narrow band of latitudes, it's completely useless. Basically the latitudes where the sun rises an hour earlier in the day.
In latitudes north, the sun rises much earlier and sets much later, so much so that the extra hour is still useless. Does it matter if daylight extends from 4AM to 9PM or 5AM to 10PM? In the winter, likewise, you either have daylight from 7AM to 3PM or 8AM to 4PM. At that time, it really doesn't matter all that much anymore - at best one of your commutes will be in the dark. Or both commutes might be in the dark.
To the extreme north, where the daylight is 24 hours, it makes even less sense to have DST.
In more equatorial latitudes, it makes no sense either since sunrise and sunset are relatively constant - it may shift maybe 15-30 minutes over the year
And that's the problem with DST - it assumes an hour shift is enough and sufficient, which might make a lot of sense for say, Northern California, but it really ought to be far greater of a shift the more northerly you get.
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Yes. Yes it does. It means I could be doing many outdoor activities for one more hour after work than I could if it got dark earlier.
Could be? Sure. Will most people be doing many outdoor activities in that one more hour after work? No, they won't. They will be in their homes watching their TVs, staring at their phones, and playing on their computers.
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This has an even worse effect. The psychological effect of it getting dark so early takes a toll on people. The daylight doesn't just dissappear at 4pm, it's a gradual diminishing of light. And it wouldn't be 4pm all winter. Closer to the fall and spring it would be 5pm or even 6pm. Makes a huge difference on your mental health.
I think the mental health data is fairly conclusive that DST is worse than no DST, mostly because of the semi-annual shocks when you jump forward or back (and mostly because of the annual jumps forward when you lose an hour).
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65N here. Come December, the sun will sort of come up at 1030 and be down again at 1430. Changing the clocks is a completely pointless exercise that delivers a swift kick in the nuts just as the weather turns dark and nasty. It needs to stop.
India had DST? Never knew about it. (Score:2)
Lived here all my life, never knew. I know we are supposed to have had two time zones at one time and there is talk of trying that again.
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See :)
https://news.slashdot.org/comm... [slashdot.org]
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So in other words (Score:2)
Samoa joins other countries way ahead of the USA in common sense matters....
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Sad but true
India never had DST (Score:2)
Why would anyone in the tropics need DST??
Leak (Score:2)
Tropics (Score:2)
There is no justification for DST in the tropics, because the variation in daylight time is minimal. DST is for temperate latitudes where winter/summer daylight variation is large.
Unlikely premise (Score:3)
I find it very hard to believe that Samoan DST was proposed for the convenience of one person. In any case, it makes absolutely no difference to one person. If he wanted to get up earlier to study insects in daylight he could just have done it.
DST is just a convenient way of getting *everyone* to get up an hour earlier in the summer to make more use of the fact that the day gets longer at both ends but our natural habits aren't conducive to making use of it.
What's really loony is the idea of places stating on DST right through the winter. The UK tried it in the late sixties and it was a disaster. If you don't want DST then just stick to UTC+/-N.
Here we go ... again... (Score:2)
In the UK, the clocks fall back on the last Sunday of October, which this year, happens to be the last day of October.
It will be met, in the week ahead and the day before, with the usual array of media discussing the various pros and cons of daylight savings.
The same old guff will be rolled out, last years articles will be dusted off, have a few date changes, but with pretty much exactly the same content and context.
It will make not a whit of difference on this island of rose tinted spectacle wearing nostal
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*lighter days* -> lighter mornings.
Why do cookies care if it's DST or not? (Score:2)