• snooggums
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    7 months ago

    Maybe, and hear me out, the problem is that 9 to 6 is the problem, since 2/3 of that time is after noon. Instead of changing reality to appease business, business, work hours could be changed to 8 to 4 with four before and four after which is both more light in the evening than DST and a shorter workday because people are more productive than they ever have been.

    But I guess you would rather let business practices determine when noon is for everyone instead of the sun.

    • azertyfun@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      7 months ago

      Business hours is no more or less of a social construct than DST or the 24 hour clock.

      The only difference is that we have a shot at making everyone agree on a timezone shift or permanent DST, but absolutely NO SHOT at getting every business to switch to an 8-4 schedule. None. It’d be a nice sentiment. But it’s not happening, and I don’t care what the number says on the clock when I leave work as long as it’s sunny outside.

      Why is it so important that the sun reaches its zenith at noon anyway? Do you often get confused while looking at your antique sundial?

      • snooggums
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        7 months ago

        First of all, noon refers to when the sun is at the highest point in the sky so being an hour off is confusing.

        Being able to look at the general position of the sun and being able to estimate time is pretty handy.

        Being able to estimate the length of day because the time between sunrise and sunset being approximately the same is handy.

        Not changing the time of day twice a year would be fucking fantastic.

        Some places already stick with standard time all year round.

        The US tried year round DST in the 70s and it was widely rejected within a year because DST during the winter is fucking awful.

        Plus, most jobs don’t mind people coming in and leaving early, which is a far more common shift adjustment than coming in and staying late.

        Year round standard time is the real solution.