- Although it's more of a nuisance than a catastrophe in the making, older computers, PDAs and DVRs may not automatically update their times when daylight-saving comes three weeks early this year--on March 11.
The date change was established by the federal Energy Policy Act of 2005, which was passed to get Americans to cut energy consumption. The thinking is that less energy will be used toward the end of the day if the sun's out later.
For years, most of the nation has set clocks ahead on the first Sunday of April.
Few computer experts think the new date will make a big difference.
But don't let my lack of concern fool you into thinking that I'm going soft on the Daylight Saving cult. Not by a long shot. I still think it's one of the dumbest things ever invented, and making it last longer is even dumber. It's especially pointless as an "energy-saving" strategy in this 21st century, technology-driven, 24/7 world.
At least there's some hope that the new arbitrary dates may not be permanent:
- According to the Energy Policy Act, Congress has the right to revert to the former daylight-saving schedule if the new method is unpopular or doesn't prove to save energy. The Department of Energy will conduct a study on its effectiveness.
1 comment:
The home clocks will be the easy part this time around! I've got a ton of gadgets to get patched at work this week!
Plus, I've still gotta buy a generator and stock my basement up with MREs.
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