We still do it though
Here too.
We still do it though
In December there is approximately 8 hours of daylight, so you have a choice of 8am-4pm or 9am-5pm.
No matter what you do with the clocks it will still be dark.
You know the EU voted to stop changing the clocks the years ago, right?
This
But it will be sold by the rag tops as 8-4 translates to 7-5 and people will be the usual mushroom brained kept in the dark and fed bullshit sheep who fall for it.
Up at 7 as usual, as the first morning I've had to turn lights on, maybe we should shut the country down and all fly south for the winter. . .
And your testament to that….
This with bells on.
Didn’t we do this back on the 60s - 70s … it was dark and miserable in the morning and Scotland complained that up in their North it was not light until mid morning.. I’m against it, if true..
‘You’re’ not
Way too dark in the evenings, so I am all for it. I can put up with going to work in the dark, but to come home in the dark is demoralising.
Yes we did - extract from Wikipedia below:-
"..............A further inquiry during 1966–1967 led the government of Harold Wilson to introduce the British Standard Time experiment, with Britain remaining on GMT+1 throughout the year. This took place between 27 October 1968 and 31 October 1971, when there was a reversion to the previous arrangement.
Analysis of accident data for the first two years of the experiment, published by HMSO in October 1970, indicated that while there had been an increase in casualties in the morning, there had been a substantially greater decrease in casualties in the evening, with a total of around 2,700 fewer people killed and seriously injured during the first two winters of the experiment,[13]: 14 (PDF p. 18) [8]: 23 [14] at a time when about 1,000 people a day were killed or injured on the roads.[15][16] However, the period coincided with the introduction of drink/drive legislation; the estimates were later modified downwards in 1989.[13]: 14 (PDF p. 18)[/I]..............."
I vote we just work less hours each day.
Kiids in Scotland going to school in pitch black darkness was a problem last time round, among other problems. Might be justified in saving electricity usage through the lights coming on later this time round though.
..and for more money
I just struggle to see how anything like this could be done without costs running into billions. Its a very different thing from doing it in the 60s: millions of different systems and apps needs to be reprogrammed, and I suppose quite a bit of hardware might need to be replaced as well... which is why I think the EU-idea never actually materialised. Better to wait until 2038 before doing those things as it will be unavoidable to spend billions on these things as we get closer to that year.
For an App and IT infrastructure side it's not as big a job as many people think. Any coder worth their salt uses the system time on the device that their app is running on. The device then takes its time from a central source which in turn takes the time from a certified NTP source. A couple of examples :
1. A company has many servers sittng in it's datacentre. In that same data centre is a local NTP server ( should be two for redundancy ). All those servers sync their time with that of the NTP server - they don't really have any knowledge of BST / GMT. They just make sure their time is the same as the NTP server. At the same time the local NTP server gets it's time source from one of a number of certified NTP services out on the internet. Most are run by Uni's - for example Cambridge Uni has four.
2. All the apps on your mobile use your mobiles time ( if they need the time to function ). Your mobile then takes it's time from the mobile network. The mobile network takes it's time from certifed NTP sources.
So the only systems that need changing are the certified NTP sources. Most organisations that run these only have a small handful of them - like Cambridge - so the job isn't that big.
To be fair, there are some companies ( 70 IIRC ) that are part of a trial to do a four day working week but for the same pay - and it's not condensed hours jus less per week. 80% of them say they will continue with it even when the trial ends. Obviously being self employed this won't help you !
I just struggle to see how anything like this could be done without costs running into billions. Its a very different thing from doing it in the 60s: millions of different systems and apps needs to be reprogrammed, and I suppose quite a bit of hardware might need to be replaced as well... which is why I think the EU-idea never actually materialised. Better to wait until 2038 before doing those things as it will be unavoidable to spend billions on these things as we get closer to that year.