Some electronics didn't get the news that Daylight Saving Time ends Nov 2 -- and automatically "fell back" this Sunday. The Energy Policy Act of 2005 changed both the starting and ending dates of Daylight Saving, “springing” the first date forward to the second Sunday in March and pushing the closing back until the first Sunday in November. [WZVN]
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Comments:
@TechnoDestructo: I was just about to say that! Love living in AZ. Kind of made it weird growing up, though, because I grew up RIGHT on the AZ/Cali border.
Who would you complain to officially about DST? I hate it and I don't know anyone who likes it.. Is there a letter we could write?
Why can't we just have one time all the time? And what makes people think that leaving kids outside in the dark even longer to wait for the school bus in the mornings is a good thing to do?
@Squeezer99: Honestly, I think DST is outdated and more of a pain in our modern society than a help. Come move to AZ, everyone, where we don't have to worry about this crap!
@mantene: I bet that's what happened to a couple in my church this weekend. They totally walked in a whole hour late.
@Kimaroo: I like DST, but I think extending into November wasn't such a great plan. It just adds to the confusion, and the later sunrises are, as you suggest, just as much of an obstacle as the earlier sunsets.
@little stripes: You just have to worry about urban sprawl, running out of water, and (if you're in Maricopa County) getting your rights violated by Arpaio's thugs.
[www.time.gov] always displays the correct time for your region in the states. It made me feel a little less crazy when half my electronics leaped back and my laptop went mad and decided it was the evening of December 31st, 2000.
My Alarm clock, that I bought two weeks before Bush decided to play Chronos, is one of these appliances. There's no way to turn the feature off, because why would you want to? It's not like they'll ever change something that's been established for 100 years... right? [FAIL!]
Here's to hoping they realize the "energy savings" are negligible and repeal the extension so my clock "works" again.
@TechnoDestructo: I second that emotion, honey. I love not messing with the clocks!
I think at one time Indiana left DST up to the individual counties, which was way confusing - any Hoosiers out there to comment?
@algal924: I was married on April 5, 1998. That day (which we realized before the wedding, and printed reminders on an insert inside the invitation envelope) was "Spring forward" for DST that year. One of our wedding guests arrived at the ceremony just in time to get on the tram for the post-ceremony tour through the botanical garden where we got married. He, of course, hadn't realized the clocks changed.
Eh, the fun part was the tram ride, anyway. :)
@uncooperative: Oh, God, Arpaio. If he wins AGAIN, I'm going to have to go to Sun City and start a fight with the old people.
@misslisa: Yeah, up until recently most Indiana did not have to deal with the DST mess. Several counties east of Chicago and others near Louisville were on Central time. Some of the southeastern counties were on Eastern. The rest of the state was with the East Coast in the winter and Chicago in the summer.
@MercuryPDX: There's no way to turn the feature off, because why would you want to?
I had one of those non-disablable clocks in DST-eschewing Arizona. Now that I'm in Texas, I'm not sure if it was more annoying then than it is now.
But oh! Life without DST was great. (Except that the TV schedule would shift by an hour when the rest of the country switched.)
@dcm684: that was one of the only things i liked about living in AZ (thankfully, that only lasted about a year).
i've been going crazy all morning trying to figure out why my time was off. thanks, consumerist, for the reassurance that i'm not completely bonkers.
@zigziggityzoo: The reason I keep hearing is that it an energy saving move: [en.wikipedia.org]
It doesn't really work if you don't fall back again.
Can we just kill Daylight Savings Time once and for all?
It is just one of these political solutions that "fixes" a problem by making things more difficult. It just shifts energy use from one part of the day to another, and in the morning people are more likely to forget to turn lights off as they are running out of the house into the darkness.
DVD recorders (same brand, purchased at the same time, different models): one reset, one didn't Desktop computers: PIII running Linux reset; PIII running 98SE did not. Dual-Boot laptop: XPSP2 reset, Linux did not (dual-boots can be tricky: each OS will reset, making for a two-hour change)
If I hadn't noticed the changes (and checked online for the correct changeover date) I'd've been an hour late for an appointment Sunday too.
@TechnoDestructo: I'm in on that one too. The only bad thing is having to adjust for the fact that any TV (and for me, XM) shows that originate outside the state shift an hour twice a year.
I'm with the guys down below, if DST's so great, do it all year then. Or stop altogether.


























If there is one thing AZ has got right that the rest of the country has not, it is DST.