The Oregon Senate has passed a bill establishing permanent Daylight Saving Time in the state, and the Governor has signaled she supports the effort. If it passes the House (and possibly the US Congress, it is a bit ambiguous to me), it could end the semi-annual resetting of clocks which causes so much annoyance and increase of injury and deaths.
Personally speaking, I'd rather it settled on permanent Standard time than Daylight time, but as long as it is steady I think it's better than the current regime.
See also:
Texas efforts: https://soylentnews.org/article.pl?sid=19/03/05/1413228
Europe's efforts: http://fortune.com/2019/03/26/european-union-parliament-daylight-saving-time/
Mandatory XKCD: https://www.xkcd.com/1268/
(Score: 3, Interesting) by bob_super on Saturday April 06 2019, @08:19PM (2 children)
> we'll be arriving at the office at 8:30AM IN THE DARK
Well ... It's a matter of choice. When the actual day is shorter than 9 hours (Seattle will see that more than San Diego), most people will either arrive or leave in the dark.
Do you feel safer driving in the dark surrounded with sleepy people, or tired people ?
I personally prefer to leave the office when there still is some sun. Others are allowed a different opinion.
Of course, once again, humans are truly the dumbest species.
Most of us could work when it's dark, and get enjoy the whole day's worth of sun (except for those needing lots of sleep).
We're also stupid enough to have decided to work as long in winter as we do in summer, when a shorter winter work day would be better for those allergic to driving in the dark, and a shorter summer work day would be better for those living where that's the only time to enjoy the outdoors (they'd work longer in winter when being outside is really bad).
TL; DR. Our whole time management sucks.
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Saturday April 06 2019, @10:53PM
Funny thing: our company has "summer hours" to accommodate time off with family when the kids are out of school. The theory goes: you work 9x4 + 4, so half-day on Fridays in the summer - and it sort of takes advantage of the longer summer days, too.
In practice, the exempts often work from home anyway, and the whole concept of 40 per week is a pretty loose thing - if every moment spent on company endeavors were accounted for, some weeks run 60+. If every coffee break, offsite lunch, social meeting, and water-cooler break were accounted for, most weeks run 25-, especially among those who do not work from home most of the time.
Україна досі не є частиною Росії Слава Україні🌻 https://news.stanford.edu/2023/02/17/will-russia-ukraine-war-end
(Score: 2) by AthanasiusKircher on Sunday April 07 2019, @01:14AM
I don't think that's actually true. You do need to sleep sometime. Maybe you could work when it's dark and enjoy the whole day during short days in winter at higher latitudes, but most people need 7-8 hours of sleep at some point to function well.
Also, not aligning your sleep schedule roughly to sunlight really screws with most people, even despite the amount of artificial light we now have. For years I tended toward unstable sleep schedules (I'm naturally a bit of a "night owl" and will tend to drift toward late nights and getting up mid-morning), because flexible work schedules sometimes allowed it. And it made me feel awful. Eventually, I returned to a pretty standard time of getting up around sunrise or a little later most mornings, and I felt a lot better. For a year at another point, I drifted back toward instability with shifting schedules, and again, I felt awful, gained weight, didn't do well despite feeling like I could sleep when I wanted. I stopped that again and have been on a regular schedule for some years...
Obviously everyone is different, but studies show those who work night shifts tend to have a lot more sleep disorders. My mother worked night shifts for many years, and then she tried to be awake to spend time with her family during the day, and it eventually completed destroyed her body's sleep clock. Now she's been retired for quite a few years, and she is miserable most nights -- falling asleep at odd hours, getting up at odd hours, sometimes suffering from insomnia, sometimes needing to lie down early.
So, no, I really don't think most humans would be happy doing what you suggest. I did have a friend years ago with an early-bird type of sleep disorder, where she always awoke around 2am and wanted to do work right away. And she had a job that allowed her to work at home or mostly adopt the schedule she wanted, so she'd work during the night and be done by late morning every day.
For someone like her, maybe your plan would work. Except she was always exhausted by mid-afternoon, and never had a social life because even eating dinner with friends was often past her bedtime. There's no optimal solution.