Congress just extended Daylight Saving Time by 2 months.
http://www.cbc.ca/story/world/national/2005/07/20/daylight-savings050720.html
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/print_story.asp?print=1&guid={7B215EB2-196A-4E03-AB43-01931499684A}
This is asinine. It's going to cause all sorts of international confusion.
It's a silly attempt to save energy, too. If people start working 10-6 instead of 9-5, the benefits (if there are any substantial benefits to start with) vanish. What prevents businesses from running 8-4 in the winter instead of 9-5? There are other ways to save electricity that don't involve tinkering with the ridiculous concept that is DST: using indirect fluorescent lighting instead of incandescent bulbs, replacing corporate CRT monitors with LCDs, and replacing high-speed desktop CPUs with low-power alternatives, to start with.
A better alternative might be to dispense with DST entirely and shift all timezones ahead an hour (effectively making DST permanent).
http://www.cbc.ca/story/world/national/2005/07/20/daylight-savings050720.html
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/print_story.asp?print=1&guid={7B215EB2-196A-4E03-AB43-01931499684A}
This is asinine. It's going to cause all sorts of international confusion.
It's a silly attempt to save energy, too. If people start working 10-6 instead of 9-5, the benefits (if there are any substantial benefits to start with) vanish. What prevents businesses from running 8-4 in the winter instead of 9-5? There are other ways to save electricity that don't involve tinkering with the ridiculous concept that is DST: using indirect fluorescent lighting instead of incandescent bulbs, replacing corporate CRT monitors with LCDs, and replacing high-speed desktop CPUs with low-power alternatives, to start with.
A better alternative might be to dispense with DST entirely and shift all timezones ahead an hour (effectively making DST permanent).