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Saturday, December 31, 2011

daylight savings in daylight savings time HUH

I'm not sure why but I always get confused about daylight savings time. At least here in Australia we only have like 5 time zone changes to get confused with. The thing I end up with the most problems with is trying to convert to the different times in America when we are in daylight savings time in Australia. The real confusion with the time conversion is that more often than not the American end of things will suggest a number of hours difference for AEST that is actually based on AEDT aka AEDST. Which means the poor person who is trying to be helpful is getting Australian Eastern Daylight Savings Time, NSW,& Vic run on in summer, and Australian Eastern Time, which in summer only Queensland runs on.


And there is the most modern argument for Queensland to take up on partaking in daylight savings. With the advent of Internet conferencing for educational purposes even more so. It is hard enough being in Oz and trying to calculate the time change for these without accounting for time zone change within Oz as well as America. One such instance caused my partner and I to have to get up at 2.30 am for a training seminar, instead of signing up for the later one.

But when we have to calculate the time for scheduling even a Internet call to America it can get very confusing. If it is daylight savings time abroad we need to figure out not only the basic time change, but which time zone change and account for daylight savings. As I read about the history of daylight savings time I find more and more reason to be great full for apps such as Google date time. The Piece I was reading on the history of daylight savings time and the fact that the daylight savings origin is a topic of debate tripped my intelligence switch to simple logics.

Being I am no historian I cannot tell you the most probable daylight savings origin, but I believe I can stear you in the right direction. If the Romans with their water clocks were the first to both have mechanized time keeping devices, mechanized clocks, and practice a similar process to daylight savings practices, then they are your origin . What I mean is the daylight savings origin is the first civilization to do and have both mechanized clocks and practice a similar process. See there was not even a need for the concept of daylight savings before mechanised clocks, mechanised time keeping as the sun produced the time keeping action on sundials of the various kinds and before them the daylight energy was what told people it was time to get up and when to do this or that.

The people against daylight savings who have no real reason other than they don't want to have to change their clocks twice a year like to use, The sun will still be up when we're trying to get to sleep!, as their argument. But if they took a break from modern reality, and let nature take control, they would find that daylight energy will wake them when it's time to get up and not keep them awake if they are tired. How do they think the Mexican sleeps during siesta, or how grandma, grandpa and children take successful sleep filled naps in the day time? Personally I was one of those people for a bit but the fact that when pay tv stopped adjusting their screening of programs and just advised the different state veiwers to calculate the showing time in accordance to Sydney time, I found a modern
Iifestyle reason to be a pro daylight savings person.

That along with the fact that even though I have had at least one alarm clock of one sort or another since I was in school, the alarm clock has only ever been used as a backup device. See my partner and I tend to wake up naturally and in time to have breakfast and get ready without rushing, even if it is at a special or earlier time to our normal schedule. And in twenty years it has been the alarm waking us only twice, as we normally wake at least 2 minutes before the alarm triggers. That's daylight energy for you.



daylight savings time, daylight energy, time change, daylight savings, daylight savings origin, time zone change

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