A "Day" Isn't What It Used To Be

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The Science Asylum

The Science Asylum

Күн бұрын

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@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
First, I want to welcome all the new people to the comments. I'm appreciating all the unique and diverse opinions. The time zone thing _is_ a matter of opinion, so it's ok to disagree and discuss. Let's just make sure we all play nice. Second, here are some things that keep coming up in discussion along with my personal responses: *"Won't this mess with everyone's circadian rhythm?"* It shouldn't. I'm not suggesting anyone keep different waking hours. I'm only suggesting we _relabel_ what those hours are called. *"How am I supposed to know if someone is awake so I can call?"* 1. You shouldn't be calling without _at least_ having texted to make sure it's ok first. 2. If they're asleep, their phone should be on silent. 3. Not everyone keeps the same schedule, so you already have to ask about it. This problem already exists. Having no time zones saves you the extra calculation. *"If someone says it's 2pm, how will I know how much daylight there is?"* Why do you need to know how much daylight there is? If that's relevant information to the conversation, they should be using more descriptive language like midday, or afternoon, or evening, or something like that. This is especially true if you're talking about authors writing dialog in their books. *"How do you plan when you travel to a different time zone?"* Wouldn't the local people be suggesting the times for those plans? If you're there for an official event, there's an itinerary. If it's a meetup with a local friend, that friend can suggest times. Is this not what already happens anyway? *"If you travel, you're going to have to adjust to the new daylight hours."* That's rather presumptuous of you 😉. In all seriousness though, I kept my home schedule the last couple times I traveled and it was glorious. Why bother adjusting? Wake up and go to sleep when you normally do. Eat your meals when you normally do. Don't let the Sun be your boss! *"China has a single time zone and it's not good."* The problem isn't China's time zone. The problem is that they _also_ require everyone to keep the same schedule in that time zone, so the people living in the far west have to wake up too early. You've got to let everyone keep the schedule that they need for their local circumstances or this doesn't work. *"Why does London get to keep the normal clocks times?"* Because they're already at UTC+0. It doesn't _have_ to be that way. I was just trying to use a system we already had. If you want something else, I'm ok with that. We can use a timezone from the middle of the ocean for all I care. You want the 24-hour format rather than am/pm? That's fine too. You want to use the star-date system from Star Trek? Let's go for it! Unfortunately, the more deviation there is from what we already use, the harder sell it's going to be. In the 1790s, France tried to institute a metric time: 10 hours/day, 100 minutes/hour, and 100 seconds/minute. It clearly didn't catch on.
@lepermessiah2608
@lepermessiah2608 2 жыл бұрын
All of these answers require a lot of assumptions/inconveniences to fix something that isn't really an issue. I honestly don't know anyone that complains about time zones.
@wolfgangloll2747
@wolfgangloll2747 2 жыл бұрын
To be honest, I find it handy to be able to check what time it is at another location and know if the people there might still be at work, or on their lunch break, or if it should be night there. so I can estimate how long I would have to wait for an email reply, for example, or whether I can give them a quick call.
@davidr5250
@davidr5250 2 жыл бұрын
As people like to go to sleep when its dark its useful to know the time zones
@tsamuel6224
@tsamuel6224 2 жыл бұрын
Personally I think we should keep our time zones and end the DST switching madness. The time zones are convenient for understanding local time as eg 8am is early morning everywhere. You may prefer to know the time but I prefer to understand it. UTC is for machines and astronomers, not people.
@DemonetisedZone
@DemonetisedZone 2 жыл бұрын
Liking your videos mate👍🥸 That Mr Beat fella Why is he called Mr Beat?🤔
@richardeldridge8335
@richardeldridge8335 2 жыл бұрын
The problem with one time for everybody is when you call your friend on the other side of the earth and he says. "Why are you calling at 3:00 PM? Everyone's asleep!" With time zones, you get a reasonable idea of where the sun is in other parts of the world. A universal time would be good for legal documents. Time zones would be good for personal interactions.
@HonestlyHolistic
@HonestlyHolistic 2 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@weebaldfella
@weebaldfella 2 жыл бұрын
I think people will use other words to describe their local environment. Like, for example "noon", "dusk", "dawn", "midnight" etc. I suspect we would need more words though. It could be fun to discover those
@SonOfTheDawn515
@SonOfTheDawn515 2 жыл бұрын
@@weebaldfella We have that. Called time zones.
@someilas7253
@someilas7253 Жыл бұрын
Really? Would you lose the knowledge that people have nighttime on the other side of the earth when you have daytime? Thats seems strange.
@deanfry879
@deanfry879 Жыл бұрын
@@someilas7253 Is it a matter of losing knowledge or a matter of thinking about that knowledge in the moment? Never heard someone say, "Oh yeah, that's in a different time zone"?
@richard4058
@richard4058 2 жыл бұрын
As a person who had regular night shift jobs and did homework at night. "Time" has always been relative to me. I've always wondered why we don't have more variety in office hours. Like I wake up and go to the bank while most people do it on their break or after work. So yeah I like the UTC idea. But I don't hate night shift like most people either. I find I have a more relaxed day avoiding traffic or lines at the store. I still get plenty of sunlight and vitamin D and go to park with my dog just on a "different schedule" then most
@MrSkinkarde
@MrSkinkarde 2 жыл бұрын
There is no day And night, just Light And dark
@devantegeorge2444
@devantegeorge2444 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrSkinkarde you had literally nothing to add😂🤦🏾‍♂️
@mando074
@mando074 2 жыл бұрын
There are some places like that. I've had many jobs in my life and one was working at a fairly famous studio. As long as our assignments were complete we were allowed to come and go as we pleased. The schedule i made for myself was 11 am to 7 pm. As long as management knew it you could do it. Some guys would come in at 6 pm and work through the night. But it was their choosing.
@technician0096
@technician0096 2 жыл бұрын
I used to prefer working overnights when I worked in retail jobs. Just avoided people and that’s all I wanted in a job 🤣😂 you really get to see the horrible side of society when working retail/fast food jobs, so might shifts are a nice way to avoid that. 🤣
@trillbilly7914
@trillbilly7914 2 жыл бұрын
And because of this you probably will live a longer, less stressed life
@TheVoidSinger
@TheVoidSinger 2 жыл бұрын
As a programmer, I do agree that the number doesn't matter.... and since it doesn't, we should keep time zones. Because as a person, regularizing when the sun comes up or goes down DOES matter, and not just for convenience. Power usage, internet traffic, and even road utilization all benefit from a "noon-centric" view that allows simpler comparison than a rolling offset. We aren't as sun driven as our ancestors but it's still one of the biggest factors affecting our lives.
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
Fair enough.
@monad_tcp
@monad_tcp 2 жыл бұрын
I am a programmer, I used to think it doesn't matter, then I learned about the fucking circadian cycle. Its seems the human machinery don't like it much when you force it at a random number. Like, who cares I wake up at 1PM UTC which is 10.am. in my timezone... while people have to go work at stupid arbitrary 9.am. stupid system. The biological machinery will always want to wake up at what's equivalent to -2 from noon. yes, I can't wake up in the middle of the night (or as the early birds call it, gasp, "morning", is that the word ? ) , aka, noon-6. why's that ? its not like the cows need to be milked or something ... We all work punching stupid keys on a computer, why does it matter the hour I work... (lol, I almost quit over this, but my boss eventually conceded, its not easy to find programmers) Now, that was the last video, going to sleep at noon-10 It would be so much simpler if we used fixed offsets to noon, instead of rolling ones. The high noon is 12h, the actual time doesn't matter much. Everything is a mess, humans are complicated
@jacobmoss1630
@jacobmoss1630 2 жыл бұрын
Definitely a good point. All the more reason to get rid of change the clocks twice a year.
@williamslifko4222
@williamslifko4222 2 жыл бұрын
Your statement, "We aren't as sun driven as our ancestors but it's still one of the biggest factors affecting our lives." makes the case of why time zones do not matter. Why would the numbers on a clock matter if we don't really need to know what they are at the time the sun comes up or goes down? The numbers on a clock face and the ability to set an alarm associated with those numbers would have been more helpful to hunter/gatherers and to farmers from the beginning of farming to present day. For people who work in offices, not so much. Use of ante and post merīdiem would no longer be necessary so we would simply switch to a 24 hour clock where 1 pm becomes 13:00, 2 pm becomes 14:00, etc. This would make global business operations much simpler.
@freak273
@freak273 2 жыл бұрын
@@williamslifko4222 I disagree, Knowing the context of the time would be more important than having one universal time. it would be easier for a business to look at customer traffic flow through out the day on a global scale if the time on the clock matched up with the time of day. and then you have major problems with all the businesses close to the international date line (say like Sydney Australia) who would have a change of date in the middle of the day rather than when most people are asleep. it's a lot easier and cheaper to just look up time differences than to change the world to one time universally.
@Metallizombie
@Metallizombie 2 жыл бұрын
Getting rid of time zones would still create the confusion of when exactly people work. Someone in say India who thinks a work day is 9am-5pm would still have to be aware a work day in the east coast of the United States was say 11am-7pm. There would still be a conversion to take into account
@electeng6481
@electeng6481 2 жыл бұрын
This is one of the most underrated subjects in physics. I really appreciate that you considered talking about it
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
I'm honestly surprised the video is doing so well. I thought this was just going to be a passion project.
@jameandthegiantpeach2273
@jameandthegiantpeach2273 2 жыл бұрын
@elect eng.... what's your take then lil bruh?
@garyobrien8202
@garyobrien8202 2 жыл бұрын
The key words here are "in physics", the vast majority of people are not even scientists and would probably think something like "wtf?" Because it would not make sense to the majority.
@juzoli
@juzoli 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, time zones are awkward when we are talking real time to a distant person. However in many cases we are exchanging timeless stories. When my friend overseas tells me what he was doing at 8am, I know he is talking about his morning, and I don’t have to think about where exactly he lives.
@carultch
@carultch 2 жыл бұрын
This works until you are talking to someone in Tibet about what happened at 8 am, when it is pitch black outside because the sun won't rise for another 2 hours. They have China's Beijing-centric time zone across a country the size of the contiguous USA, that makes no sense for Tibetans and Uiygurs way out west.
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
Why do you need to know that's his morning?
@juzoli
@juzoli 2 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceAsylum For example if my friend (who lives overseas) says he had a coffee at 7am, than it is fairly normal. But if it actually means 8pm, then I should asks questions. Or if he got home from a party at 9pm that’s different than getting home at 4am. This alone is a big clue if he had a great party, or he was tired and went home instead. Most stories are relevant to its context, and the context is mostly local. Minority of the stories involve multiple time zones. So with this idea to abolish time zones, those minority of the stories would be easier to follow, whir most of the stories would be more confusing, because I need to translate it continuously, even if the whole story is contained to his location.
@okaro6595
@okaro6595 2 жыл бұрын
Just think what would that do to literature? Would translators then adjust somehow the times? This would add even more to the problem. Lets face it is a braindead idea and anyone suggesting it should be canceled.
@TechnoMinarchist
@TechnoMinarchist 2 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceAsylum Because the environmental context in which situations occur change how people respond to them and how we picture them in our head. Something happening outside at dawn creates a very different picture than something happening outsidein the middle of the night.
@NathanRichHotpot
@NathanRichHotpot 2 жыл бұрын
Someone called me and woke me up at 6AM! What were you doing sleeping so late? No here 6AM isn't late here, it's like an hour before we wake up normally. Oh so 4PM here? Don't know, where did you say you were again? Texas Hang on let me get a time conversion chart to help me figure out what time it was for you. No, it's 3PM there. Wow that is early. Damn! Thank God we don't need to remember time zones anymore! We just have to remember time conversion charts, which is totally different! So convenient!
@count_of_darkness5541
@count_of_darkness5541 2 жыл бұрын
When you are an owl, damned larks just ring you at 11 of morning. Living in the same timezone doesn't help when people don't care.
@trappedkitty5335
@trappedkitty5335 2 жыл бұрын
24 hour clock. AM and PM would necessarily need to go away. Be mindful that your co-workers and friends start their days on a different "shift" than you do. 1600 (time to start work in my time zone) is the evening in Australia. Don't bug them during family time! This assumes midnight still occurs on the current system's GMT. Dolly Parton could come up with a new song about America working during their shifts instead of the same hourly set floating across time zones. Designating your day time as shift names may be a way to keep the time zone framework in place during the normalizing of global time; e.g., I work the Pacific shift, you work the Indian shift and she works the USSR Zone 5 shift. It's a step toward letting go while something new comes along.
@NathanRichHotpot
@NathanRichHotpot 2 жыл бұрын
@@trappedkitty5335 sounds like changing things from one to another, with the same amount of work to do but nothing to relate it to. Instead of having to remember what time it is somewhere when you call, you no longer know what time things should be at a given place, basically. And you end up having to say things like "OK everyone on the call, remember we need to come in 4 hours from the global normal morning time equivalent in your area!" Maybe I'm just not seeing the advantage...
@mal2ksc
@mal2ksc 2 жыл бұрын
@@count_of_darkness5541 Do you take all phone calls by simply repeating "Who?" at the caller?
@DongsMBM
@DongsMBM 2 жыл бұрын
Oh, surprising to see you here, Nathan
@kaskaz
@kaskaz 2 жыл бұрын
I agree with other comments. For me, when I arrange a time for a phone call to a friend in the US for example (I am in Spain) it is easier for me to know how many hours of difference we have, and know if they will be awake, working or whatever. I think it is more difficult to ask "where is the sun at your 5pm" than asking "what time is it there now" and remember the difference.
@leelauer517
@leelauer517 2 жыл бұрын
Either way, you still have to know the difference between the places. That will always be the same. No matter what the clock says, if you are starting your work day roughly following the sun, i.e. what we now call morning, it makes no difference if your clock reads 0900 or 2300, you still can't call some in the US as you know they'd be asleep.
@Rwdphotos
@Rwdphotos 2 жыл бұрын
It would be easier, bc you can just ask when their noon is and call at that time. It’s the same time for you as it is for them, so no math needed.
@King-tk5bg
@King-tk5bg 2 жыл бұрын
@@Rwdphotos That's where you realise time zones would still be a thing, even if all clock match.
@Rwdphotos
@Rwdphotos 2 жыл бұрын
@@King-tk5bg I don't think you understand the concept of a time zone
@King-tk5bg
@King-tk5bg 2 жыл бұрын
@@Rwdphotos Maybe you don't. There would still be areas that would be somewhat synchronised, agreeing solar noon would be at 16:00 for instance, even in places where it would be closer to 17:00. And those people would use a notation like "UTC+4" to let others know what schedule they are on. That fits the definition of a time zone on my perspective, but maybe you want to call it by a different name.
@danielcopeland3544
@danielcopeland3544 2 жыл бұрын
Why not? Because for those of us in the middle of the Pacific, the calendar would switch from Monday to Tuesday in the middle of the day. It would force countries in far-flung parts of the world to go through massive organizational upheaval, albeit admittedly only once, for no particular local benefit. People would resist. They'd keep using local time to organize their lives and just look up a conversion table if they wanted to know the global time -- which is effectively what we already do.
@Hansca
@Hansca 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly, UTC is not a secret, anyone can use it.
@monad_tcp
@monad_tcp 2 жыл бұрын
except those people die in old age, and you effectively solved the problem in 1 generation if you forced it by Law.
@danielcopeland3544
@danielcopeland3544 2 жыл бұрын
@@monad_tcp _Enforce it by law?! Punish_ people for calling it 1pm instead of 0400 UTC? What kind of twisted ethical priorities could possibly justify _that?_
@danielcopeland3544
@danielcopeland3544 2 жыл бұрын
@@monad_tcp And you haven't solved the problem of the calendar day changing in the middle of the actual day.
@monad_tcp
@monad_tcp 2 жыл бұрын
@@danielcopeland3544 Well DST is enforced by law, so what's the problem ?
@DevSarman
@DevSarman 2 жыл бұрын
Getting rid of time zones would do nothing other than creating new problems. Instead of needing to figure out what time the clock reads in a given country, you'd need to figure out what part of the day a given time describes on the world clock. Say you need to schedule a call with someone half-way around the world: the video claims you could just name a time, but then you need to figure out the waking hours for the people in the city you're calling and also the overlap between your waking hours and theirs. You haven't solved any problem with one world clock; in fact, it probably leads to more ambiguity than we have with time zones. The main problem of the video is an issue of changing the clock twice a year, which by means we indeed should get rid of daylight saving time, not the time zone itself
@marsovac
@marsovac 2 жыл бұрын
You already need to figure out the hours of the other person and reach an agreement. Anyhow if you don't want to coordinate too much you will need to know when the other person is active, and the new method does not change that, only removes calculations away. This is how it goes currently: Person A: I want to have a call tomorrow at 9AM. Person B: 9AM which time? Person A: 9AM my time. Person B: Ok let me do some calculations. Person B: ... That is not OK, this is midnight my time... can we do it 9AM my time? ... ... ... ... 6 hours of email and calculation later ... we got a time With the new method: Person A: I need to have a call tomorrow at 9AM. Person B: That's not ok, I am at sleep and wake up at 1PM. Person A: Ok 2PM? Person B: Ok. ^^ see any reference to time works for both and no calculations are needed, but you still need to know when the other person is available, the same as now.
@DevSarman
@DevSarman 2 жыл бұрын
@@marsovac the flaw of the so called "new method" fails to bring the context of sun position in a day, in which the Person A did not gave the idea of whether he'll still be awake or not The human cost of the so called "new method" only creates a greater version of Beijing time where people living in the far western regions observe sunrise as late as 10.30 am
@NondescriptMammal
@NondescriptMammal 2 жыл бұрын
As a software developer who dealt with aviation situations, I can attest to what a mind-boggling complexity is introduced by time zones + daylight savings in so many software situations that would otherwise be relatively simple. Obviously aviation has long ago adopted the obvious solution, all of the aviation community thinks and communicates only in universal time.
@ihorsvir
@ihorsvir 2 жыл бұрын
Same for banking and telecom -- the time is usually stored in unix time (seconds before/after 00:00:00 UTC on 1 January 1970), and being converted to local time on displaying to the user, while taking into account local timezone, daylight saving, leap years, leap second time adjustments, different calendars and other nonsense humans come up with. In telecom it also accounts for relativity when synchronizing events with satellites.
@MrWhateva10
@MrWhateva10 2 жыл бұрын
@Nondescript UTC is still synchronized to astronomical time through the use of leap seconds. Humans schedule them by observation of our orbital motion, so we've been using the last second of June 30 or December 31, but only occasionally, to have a 23:59:60 before rolling over to 0:00:00 of the next 24 hour "day". That means not every minute has 60 seconds, and not every day has 24 hours, and not every year has 31,536,000 seconds both because of leap seconds and leap days. It's all a mess, and will only get worse when we start communicating with humans on the Moon and Mars. Computers would be perfectly happy to just count the number of integer oscillations of a Cesium atom since an epoch, but I think humans will always impose local scaling factors to understand our circadian rhythms.
@MrWhateva10
@MrWhateva10 2 жыл бұрын
Chat apps now often display the local time of the recipient you're about to communicate with, and frankly that removes almost all the burden on me to figure anything out. I still hate DST because it messes with my personal daily routine. I think an ideal solution would be algorithmic timezones that would flex throughout the year to center our local time on solar noon by adjusting our UTC offset by some number of seconds per day. Computers stick with UTC, or even an improved UTC without leap seconds and days, and a timezone like CET varies between UTC+01:00 and UTC+02:00 smoothly through the year. Such a timezone would make any mechanical clock obsolete however.
@NondescriptMammal
@NondescriptMammal 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrWhateva10 Well yeah, even leap years are more complicated than most people realize. It's not simple as year divisible by 4... because if year is divisible by 100, it's not a leap year, unless that year is also divisible by 400... so 2000 was a leap year, but 1700, 1800, 1900, 2100 etc. are not
@RickLaBanca
@RickLaBanca 2 жыл бұрын
Aviation but not reservation! All flight schedules are local, which is painful for developers but easy for the public.
@SamuraiPipotchi
@SamuraiPipotchi 2 жыл бұрын
I think time zones have their value - it's very intuitive for someone to say the time of day in their timezone and then I'll recognise where in their day to day cycle they are. But I think using both a unified and zone based clock in tandem would be smart. People wouldn't have to convert from multiple time zones when they hear UTC. They'd know the conversion for their area. It would help simplify things.
@professorvegas
@professorvegas 2 жыл бұрын
Yes it is called Greenwich Mean Time and corresponds to 0-degrees longitude
@SamuraiPipotchi
@SamuraiPipotchi 2 жыл бұрын
​@@professorvegas Yeah, I know...
@gamerdinbasarabia2093
@gamerdinbasarabia2093 Жыл бұрын
Isn't that kinda what we have? When I get the message, the meeting will be at 11am UTC+4, I just substract 4 from 11 and add my timezone. The problem is remembering what time zone I am in 😅
@SamuraiPipotchi
@SamuraiPipotchi Жыл бұрын
@@gamerdinbasarabia2093 Read above comment.
@MuJoeTheMean
@MuJoeTheMean Жыл бұрын
I think the thing everyone likes about time zones (being able to say it's 3pm and be understood) can easily be replaced with words we already have, like dawn, morning, afternoon and dusk. Those words are already precise enough for conversation, and if you need to schedule something, then you would use numbers. Basically, I think we could have the best of both worlds, with no real downside.
@xyzabc4574
@xyzabc4574 2 жыл бұрын
"Call it a day." was a seriously funny joke. I actually LoL'ed. Dork.
@timshoemaker.9752
@timshoemaker.9752 2 жыл бұрын
🤣
@hankblaster
@hankblaster 2 жыл бұрын
Stressed?
@broganrwells
@broganrwells 2 жыл бұрын
It would have been funny if I didn’t see it coming when it’s pinned up at the top.
@jaybingham3711
@jaybingham3711 2 жыл бұрын
If he would have shared that with Mr. Beast "Oh, good one...I just got done saying..." that would have been epic. Dork overload.
@KhAnubis
@KhAnubis 2 жыл бұрын
Personally I think we should keep our time zones. Sure it would be nice to tell people in other time zones “let’s call at 13:00”, but when traveling we would just have to know when people do everything. I also usually use time zones to see which of my int‘l friends are probably awake. Basically, just because I would immediately know what time it is somewhere doesn’t mean I‘d know if the person was awake or not. Signed, a fellow DST hater (let‘s at least end that madness)
@Hurricayne92
@Hurricayne92 2 жыл бұрын
Yea gave this some thought when I was thinking about how a multi planet civilisation would deal with time and really, I couldn’t think of a more elegant fix than timezones (dealing with time between 2 colonised planets is a completely different beast and really I can’t think of a clean solution at all)
@likebot.
@likebot. 2 жыл бұрын
Good point. I see the value in a world time but your opinion makes much sense. And the majority of the world would be happier to just end DST, the cause of jetlag for everyone twice a year.
@justindowling281
@justindowling281 2 жыл бұрын
Like any change, current generations would have to work hard to adjust to a change of this type. However, future generations would take it in stride, not having the experience of the previous convention. Most people are missing the point of the argument and reasoning about how it would work in practice right now. The argument against is similar to the argument against converting to metric in America. Most people are currently comfortable and functioning in the current system. Why change it if it works? I think any change of this nature would have to be adopted by different international communities/industries over time, to justify governments falling in line and build the consensus necessary for such a switch. So if you think this is better, you have to convince people in your specific field, company, industry, and try to build momentum.
@stolenlaptop
@stolenlaptop 2 жыл бұрын
I was going to say exactly this.
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
@@Hurricayne92 If go interplanetary, it might be better to measure time using the pulses from a distant pulsar. Like, maybe, the one in the Crab Nebula. It could be like stardates in Star Trek.
@iammrbeat
@iammrbeat 2 жыл бұрын
I sure had a great TIME making my video, and it is certainly about TIME we collaborated. Admittedly, though, more of us should spend more TIME talking about the true purpose of TIME zones. All the TIME I have spent listening to people argue that TIME zones are overrated has really caused me to spend some TIME reflecting about it. Anyway, if you are reading this right now, thanks for taking the TIME to do so and to watch both our videos.
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
First!
@floppaplatinum5386
@floppaplatinum5386 2 жыл бұрын
Second
@harshsheth4989
@harshsheth4989 2 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceAsylum 4th
@tmrogers87
@tmrogers87 2 жыл бұрын
Actually, in some frame of reference, you all commented simultaneously
@localverse
@localverse 2 жыл бұрын
Haha 👍 Hmmm, in another frame of reference we haven't even commented yet? 🤔
@juicred1
@juicred1 2 жыл бұрын
2:18 as a man who has lived his entire life in Michigan; I felt this
@ahobimo732
@ahobimo732 2 жыл бұрын
Dear Michigan, On behalf of all of Canada, I'd like to say: We feel you.
@matthewrikard117
@matthewrikard117 2 жыл бұрын
time zones are still handy to figure out when it's too early or too late to ask your co-worker a question. Knowing it's 10am here, but 7am where they are takes fewer brain cycles than "it's 4am everywhere, what does that mean for talking to Susan again?"
@tomcollins5112
@tomcollins5112 2 жыл бұрын
Bingo. The problem with UTC is that it's so simple, it makes time too complex to be practical. You would have a lot of difficulty trying to determine what point of the day other people around the world are in.
@jabinibanez3641
@jabinibanez3641 2 жыл бұрын
Good point. But small down side to layover flight times. Sleep schedules. Etc.
@benb3928
@benb3928 2 жыл бұрын
If you already know there's a 3 hour difference, then you can use UTC just the same as a timezone. Currently, you still have to know the timezone difference when talking to someone internationally, and switching to UTC isn't going to change that, but it will simplify having multiple "clocks".
@JuanRanklin
@JuanRanklin 2 жыл бұрын
EXACTLY. This legit proves people rely on sCiEnCe way too much to the point of delusion.
@PeteZam
@PeteZam 2 жыл бұрын
you are literally just doing the math in your head, unless you have to google time zone differences, but most people already know the differences between the time zones relevant to them. there is absolutely nothing complicated about it at all, you do basic arithmetic, lets not sit here and pretend like we would need to start computing some complicated integral, its basic addition and subtraction. so pretending that it somehow becomes more complicated or complex is silly. if theres a universal time now, and prior to that CA was 3 hours behind you because your in the eastern time zone, guess what, its still the same, you subtract 3 from your time to see where they are at. stop making this out to be something complicated
@hollow_ego
@hollow_ego 2 жыл бұрын
One benefit of having timezones is that it helps us understand when day time is in other places. If I ask someone what time it is at their place and they say it's 2pm, I know that is day time and they probably have been up for a while. On the other hand if it's 2pm for everyone, I'll need a different way of understanding the difference from my day time to theirs. "So I'll call you at 10 am" "Are you crazy? That's in the middle of the night!" "Oh so when would it work for you?" "Maybe 5pm" "That's already too late" You might end up just calculating my time + x hours = what is early morning for me. That is basically time zones, but with probably even more confusing. Or you end up searching "Noon time in country x". I think the timezones help with having an intuitive feeling of what that number means in relation to your daily routine. You don't need to learn that 6pm means early morning in Chicago. If someone says "Event x happened at 10pm in y" you know that it was at the end of the day. Still, there probably is potential to make timezones better.
@mademedothis424
@mademedothis424 2 жыл бұрын
I like the irony that the video is extrmely physics-y in proposing the least practical way to standardize time beyond cultural references, but the primary way to express time sticks to AM/PM anglocentric conventions that are literally describing whether the time is before or after the sun peaking in the sky, with the much more rational 24 hour clock being relegated to the footnotes. Traditioooon! But yes, you're right on the money. Hours of the day are not about keeping time in sync across the world (the Internet does that for us these days, and that works on a unified clock already), it's about defining rough bands for things like working hours and sleeping times, so we don't all keep waking up our grandparents in the middle of the night when we live abroad. It'd be madness to try to coordinate a multinational event on UTC. Picture that wall of clocks you get in multinational companies to let you know when people in other offices come to work. In UTC you'd still need that, but it'd be some spreadsheet of which time of the day different people come in and out of work and have lunch breaks instead. For two locations you may be able to mark it on a single clock, but stuff would get stupid really fast if you have a bunch of locations.
@SkylerLinux
@SkylerLinux 2 жыл бұрын
I think you're missing the point, yes timezones as we currently use them hour of the day is the same part of the day. However in the new system you'd start by picking which part of the day {early morning, morning, afternoon, evening, etc} then picking an hour that falls in that part. Currently you think about 2pm, and are like well they've been up for hours. I work nights, I don't get up until the local 5pm. Also as the southern hemisphere has their summer/winter reversed to the northern hemisphere and Australia happens to be on the GMT- side of the Meridian Southern Hemi, with North America being GMT+ and Northern Hemi. So when a North American wants to call an Aussie not only are there the fake timezones that don't actually match the position of the sun, you have the North American Savings switch, then generally a week or so later the Australian Savings switch; If you want to call once a week you'll have to scheduled around the TimeZone differences, and the Savings at least 4 times a year. In the new system, you'd be like "2PM Earth Standardised Time (EST) is morning for me" then they'd respond "2pm EST is late evening here" now you know that 2pm Earth Standardised Time is good for you both to call. No time Zone non-sense, no Daylight BS, and you did it all in an E-mail like they did so long ago in the 2020s. Which will still be around in the far-future of the 3000s
@kevlarandchrome
@kevlarandchrome 2 жыл бұрын
@Fluffy Pillow Your suggestion breaks the intuitiveness just as much as no time zones.
@nightsinger81
@nightsinger81 2 жыл бұрын
Understanding when day time is, is actually not that useful, if you simply want to schedule a meeting. You need to know the timezones for all people involved in the meeting and adjust for them. If there was only one coordinated time, you could simply ask them which period of time would work for them and compute the overlap instead. Living in Germany, I usually work from 8am to 5pm (UTC), while someone in New York might be working from 1pm to 9pm (UTC). Knowing these ranges is enough to tell that we could potentially meet between 1pm and 5pm - without anyone having to shift their working hours. Even if we have timezones, we still need to know about other peoples working hours, since not everybody is working 9 to 5. Some start at 5am, some at 10am, some work night shifts, ...
@joshuahillerup4290
@joshuahillerup4290 2 жыл бұрын
@@nightsinger81 you know we have calendar programs now that take care of that stuff for us, right?
@alexpotts6520
@alexpotts6520 2 жыл бұрын
I feel that this falls into the trap of arguing that "X is a social construct" implies that "X is bad" or "X shouldn't exist". But lots of social constructs exist for very good reason. Money is a social construct, but it enables us to help each other (even to help total strangers whom we'd have no reason to trust) by giving us something we can use to exchange for other, more intrinsically useful stuff. The rule of law is a social construct but it does a good job of keeping undesirable behaviours (like, y'know, murder) to a minimum. Time zones are not so obviously essential to civilisation like money or law, but that doesn't mean they're totally pointless or without merit either, even if the way they are divided up is pretty arbitrary.
@existdissolve
@existdissolve 2 жыл бұрын
I think they are bad, simply because they overcomplicate things for completely unnecessary reasons. I cannot even calculate the amount of time I've lost during software development having to deal with timezones, daylight savings time, etc. I get the historical reasons for timezones, daylight savings time, etc., and I imagine that very initially, a complete change would cause some minor problems. But heck, most EVERYONE uses their phones for their "time keeping" anyway, so if the software just took care of the "new" standard, I think the vast majority of people would adapt pretty quickly and perhaps even come to realize just how stupid the old way was (just like we realize how insane having to pay for "long distance phone calls" was 15 years ago).
@alexandertownsend3291
@alexandertownsend3291 2 жыл бұрын
Fair enough.
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
I'm not arguing that they're inherently a bad idea. They served us well for a while there. I'm just arguing that they're no longer necessary.
@DevSarman
@DevSarman 2 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceAsylum time zones are still necessary, getting rid of it only bringing a cost of messing with human's life along with circadian rhythm, in this case making a single world time zone just making a greater version of Beijing time, where people living in the far western provinces observe sunrise as late as 10.30 am
@alexpotts6520
@alexpotts6520 2 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceAsylum wasn't expecting feedback. Always love it when content creators engage with comments like this. Keep up the good work on this channel 👍
@dragongirl744
@dragongirl744 2 жыл бұрын
I love the idea of no time change. We really can overcomplicate things.
@dabeste6163
@dabeste6163 2 жыл бұрын
Imagine travelling a lot. You'd have to memorize the local daily schedule for every place. Examples: In asia, stores would be open from 00 to 12, in Europe from 07 to 19. On the west coast of the USA from 16 to 04. That means, everytime you travel, you have to look up and memorize the local daily schedule. Or you memorize the time offset to your 'home schedule' and always add it to the current time (e.g. USA has offset of -9 hours to europe). In that case, wouldn't it be smarter to let your clock apply the offset? Sure, using one universal time makes things simpler, but it also makes some other things more complicated. In the end, we have time zones for everyday life and UTC time for things that need to be coordinated internationally, like aviation, internet, weather forecasting, etc. And i think it's mostly good the way it is.
@tristantheoofer2
@tristantheoofer2 2 жыл бұрын
but the problems should we all switch to no dst or permanent dst lol.
@robertt9342
@robertt9342 2 жыл бұрын
@@dabeste6163 . TRADITION! Just because it’s tradition doesn’t mean it’s bad.
@guntarskosts
@guntarskosts 2 жыл бұрын
If you want to get rid of time zones, then firstly and automatically stop using that "AM/PM nonsense", but normal 24hr time format instead. If the Sun and time zones are thrown out of time system, then "Ante or Post Meridiem" (before and after MIDDAY - Sun in zenith) is no longer clock connected terms.
@quujj
@quujj 2 жыл бұрын
The AM/PM system comes from clocks only having up to 12 on them. I'm pretty sure there isn't any hourhand/minutehand/secondhand clocks that go all the way up to 24.
@knuckingfutters5399
@knuckingfutters5399 2 жыл бұрын
​@@quujj 24-hour analog clocks exist, and have existed as well as the 12 hour analog (And for most of history, was preferred over the 12h clock). AM and PM has existed since around 1500 B.C.~ and was used to describe which side of the sundial the shadow was on. Ante Meridiem was on the left side on the northern hemisphere, right on the southern, and visa versa for Post Meridiem.
@ffggddss
@ffggddss 2 жыл бұрын
@@quujj "The AM/PM system comes from clocks only having up to 12 on them." No, you've got it exactly backward - the AM/PM system is the reason for (most) clocks having only 1 to 12 on them! There *are,* and have been for a very long time, 24-hr clocks; and up until a few decades ago, they, like all clocks back then, were analog. The hour hand on a 24-hr clock revolves at half the speed of its 12-hr counterpart (1 instead of 2 revolutions per day). And the hours are numbered from 0 (at top) to 23, in 15º increments, instead of 1 to 12 (at top) , in 30º increments. Searching on "24 hour clock face" should bring up some images of them. Nowadays, many of our digital devices (computers, tablets, smart phones, ...) that have clock features, allow setting them to either a 12 or a 24-hr display. Fred
@johnhackett6332
@johnhackett6332 2 жыл бұрын
*Time* is a cyclical measurement, divided into units by the rate of change in magnitude along a given vector(s).
@indrawibawa6353
@indrawibawa6353 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, i get confused with those am/pm things
@JMO777X
@JMO777X 2 жыл бұрын
"Clock time" is more accurately defined by the concept of "time of day" or average solar time with a 0 reference point of 12AM/midnight. This reference allows us as humans to form patterns in our daily lives that can be universally understood by everyone on the planet. UTC is great for time related calculations, but time of day is useful for creating a common structure that we can reference that does not change throughout the year. It provides a sense of control and regularity to something that would otherwise be variable.
@kaylaa2204
@kaylaa2204 2 жыл бұрын
Thats what I'm saying! It would be weird if you had to figure out what 3 AM meant in Japan and whether that was day or night. The fact that a number is connected to where the sun actually is in the sky, is practical for the common person. For scientists, I can understand why this is impractical, but for practical purposes, it's quite suited to what it's used for
@localverse
@localverse 2 жыл бұрын
The common structure can collapse when scheduling meetings with groups of people from across the globe. We should probably rename UTC to 'common time' or 'world time' (or 'space time' 🙃) so it clicks better with people.
@grayaj23
@grayaj23 2 жыл бұрын
@@kaylaa2204 I agree in theory that "it would be weird". I just think it would be *less weird* than the system we have now. It only looks normal because we're used to it, but it carries its own set of problems -- of course, my main reason for saying that is that my job involves figuring out what time something happened by collecting information from different countries around the globe. Coordinating a meeting is hard when you have to tell each person "Ok Fred, that's X:XX your time. No, Sally, Fred is in Utah. You're in New Orleans. So YOU start at Y:XX". And inevitably, half of them get it wrong. I would love to be able to just tell them "We start at UTC 23:30" and have everyone get it right for once.
@armenianzombie
@armenianzombie 2 жыл бұрын
@@grayaj23 protip: just use a digital calendar, like google or outlook, or even zoom - they all do that kind of UTC calculation for you, and subsequently make the adjustments for the recipent's calendar.
@xerotolerant
@xerotolerant 2 жыл бұрын
That’s a very polite way to say this is a really bad idea. Also getting rid of time zones would just recreate the same problems that time zones were created to solve while giving us basically nothing in return
@GummieI
@GummieI 2 жыл бұрын
While I will agree that DST is stupid and should be gotten rid of everywhere. Changing to one world timezone only, is just gonna move the problem, and in fact make it even more confusing, as instead of having to do a one time adjustment of your clock when you travel there, and one time adjustment back when going home, you would instead have to relearn what time is daytime when going there, and unlearn it when going home again. You would still have to adjust your sleepschedule, and now instead of knowing that no matter where on the earth you are, you can go buy your grocereies from somewhere around 8-9am to 9-10pm, when ever you have to go somewhere you have to learn what their open hours are, when you go to sleep and wake up etc etc. And anyone doing International business, would have it even worse, specially if it is in multiple places current timezones. I would say that we could use more consistency in timezones, the current timezone map is indeed a mess, as so many places don't line up with the geographical local time. Timezones should plain and simple go along the closest country border for it geographical location, and everyone should be using Standard times. And for countries that are so wide as to cover many timezones (US, Canada, China etc), use either state borders, or geographic features, like major rivers or similar for the timezones borders within the country. tl;dr: DST? GET RID OF THAT S***, everyone, should just use "standard time" for their timezone Timezones? Should stay, but some refinement and standardization of what timezones each country belong in does need some work
@loturzelrestaurant
@loturzelrestaurant 2 жыл бұрын
Know Sci Man Dan? The Science-KZbinr? And: May i recommend you even more, regardless of you knowing Dan or not? I mean, i got so many and i LOVE spreading Education via Recommendations.
@pinklady7184
@pinklady7184 2 жыл бұрын
I love DST. An hour being put forward in winter means I can sleep in by another hour.
@Trigger2931
@Trigger2931 2 жыл бұрын
@@pinklady7184 No you can't, you don't actually sleep any more or less. moving the clock forward or back doesn't magically make more time, you'd have to go to bed an hour earlier relative to the timezone to get that extra hour. DST is the stupidest thing in existence. It's not like you can spend that saved daylight at another time. Besides it would make more sense if it was in summer than in winter, as the day is longer thereby allowing you to enjoy the sun more. Not in the winter where you literally get less sun because of DST. Remember DST was invented due to a candle shortage. Not because of any of the reasons people use to justify it. It's only maintained cause of tradition and people's stupidity
@TheObsesedAnimeFreaks
@TheObsesedAnimeFreaks 2 жыл бұрын
no, we should go one hour ahead because fuck sunlight at 6AM, or hell 5, I hate switching between them but my god we should jump ahead and stay ahead...
@monad_tcp
@monad_tcp 2 жыл бұрын
" and now instead of knowing that no matter where on the earth you are, you can go buy your grocereies from somewhere around 8-9am to 9-10pm, " just get rid of unions, and let the bezos open the store 24/7 I'm kidding (the irony is that it would create more jobs, but although shit ones, can't win)
@saikiran4512
@saikiran4512 2 жыл бұрын
"Call it a day" I never thought we could use this phrase to actually mean it. 😄
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
😂
@FirstLast-vr7es
@FirstLast-vr7es 2 жыл бұрын
I never even considered the concept of universal time. I could go for that. It's just a number. Nothing but your concept of time would have to change. No sleep schedule change. I dig it.
@haze6647
@haze6647 2 жыл бұрын
You are not a youtuber, international youtuber, they need to set their upload time, make sure it suit their international fan's time, so, it always be on their mind.
@abashedsanctimony154
@abashedsanctimony154 2 жыл бұрын
God is said to have cut short the time of Earth's destruction in the last days. Matt 24:22. This is a side effect of His Mercy. But the Wrath will be equal to His anger. So yes He will cut short days as in speed them up. As evil and wickedness intensifies visibly through the world, He also increases the destruction, He also stretched out the Heavens. Evolution did not do anything on that matter. Isai 42 Isaiah 44:24 Isai 51 Everything that God says will happen, happens. Everything that a scientist says is a theory; all the while looking up at the Place where God sits, Heaven. How ironic.
@randominternetguy3537
@randominternetguy3537 2 жыл бұрын
Sleep schedule would still change if you flew somewhere. They'd wake up at a different time, and sleep at another time.
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
@@haze6647 KZbin analytics tells us what time our audience is watching in _our own_ time zone. What time it is in other parts of the world is irrelevant.
@Pampersnoot
@Pampersnoot 2 жыл бұрын
Keep the time zones. Let’s say I travel from California to Britain. With time zones, I just move my watch forward on the plane, and all the numbers on the dial mean the same thing, my intuitions are preserved. We switch to Universal time and I have to calculate the difference in my head every time I look at my clock because the numbers don’t mean anything. If I am tired, stressed, or in a rush then it is highly likely that I will forget to do that and I’ll mess something up, which would make for a lousy vacation.
@mytech6779
@mytech6779 2 жыл бұрын
The crew of that plane have their watches set to UTC... as does the ATC they are talking too.
@LiquidWater91
@LiquidWater91 2 жыл бұрын
@@mytech6779 sure, utc is fine for certain things. I dont think anyone is arguing that. What it isnt fine for is normal human use, as otherwise there is no intuition of what times are relevant to another person located somewhere else.
@monad_tcp
@monad_tcp 2 жыл бұрын
I'm fucked in both of the timelines, and I can only work in Central Pacific Timezone... My body refuses to wake up at 9.am if its not in that specific Timezone. It means I always wake up -2 from high-noon. Always, regardless of the timezone, which is kind of arbitrary. I might as well use UTC, it won't change much to me, as my clock is always synchronized as other people use GMT-4 , everything is even worse because I remote work with a global team with Russians and Indians...
@monad_tcp
@monad_tcp 2 жыл бұрын
I said timelines ? I mean Timezones, (might I make some Copenhagen interpretationst angry with that).
@mrgilbe1
@mrgilbe1 2 жыл бұрын
And time zones convey meaning. When I book an intercontinental meeting I check the time zones to make sure all the participants are awake. With universal UTC I'd need a separate parallel system to let me understand each person's local office time and sleeping time. Kinda like... the Time zone system.
@Mas0o0n
@Mas0o0n 2 жыл бұрын
I live in AZ. I sometimes like to pretend that AZ time is the one true universal time because we never have to switch our clocks for "daylight savings" like the rest of the US does.
@EmilyTienne
@EmilyTienne 2 жыл бұрын
In Indiana, we were just like you (never had to change our clocks) until a few years ago, they went with the rest of the country. I miss the old days.
@ThunderClawShocktrix
@ThunderClawShocktrix 2 жыл бұрын
living up in the snowbelt i have to say we realyl do need to swtich clocks otherise we'd ever have sunraise way too early in summer or way to late in winter. is it ideal no, but its a necessary evil
@rispy4875
@rispy4875 2 жыл бұрын
and Hawaii
@youtoob1811
@youtoob1811 2 жыл бұрын
Nice to see this channel tagging-in other content producers (eg Mr Beats) that may have touched on similar concepts in their own work. I've seen multiple videos on another very popular physics channel where they clearly had been "influenced" (putting it politely) by content from here. The video about energy travelling "around" wires is the most recent example.
@BlazeHiker-One
@BlazeHiker-One 2 жыл бұрын
I usually wait until the end of a video before deciding to hit the like button, but on this one you had me at “call it a day.”
@djsmeguk
@djsmeguk 2 жыл бұрын
Construction is definitely my favourite season. The smell of freshly laid asphalt...
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
😂
@PR-fk5yb
@PR-fk5yb 2 жыл бұрын
If you lived here in Montreal, Quebec you would know there as 4 such constructions seasons....
@JonathanMandrake
@JonathanMandrake 2 жыл бұрын
Local Time being linked to the location of the sun is actually pretty good, because if I move somewhere else (for example to Asia) I don't need to know what time it is where I came from, but whereabouts the sun is where I am. To most persons, it matters more where the sun is standing in the sky than the international time. It may help with international trade and things like that, however for most people, it would actually be detrimental. Now Changing when is what time is bad, but that is nothing new
@flannn6
@flannn6 2 жыл бұрын
As society grows and more and more people becomes connected via the web the urge to understand which time is "there" will be greater than our care about the sun. We just need more TIME till more people suffer from timezones issues
@cadekachelmeier7251
@cadekachelmeier7251 2 жыл бұрын
@@flannn6 But we still need to have an idea of what their sun is doing since most human activity is and will continue to be when the sun is out. So UTC can help you both agree to have the meeting at 6, but it doesn't tell you if you should expect them to be awake at that point.
@marsovac
@marsovac 2 жыл бұрын
That might be true if you actually go somewhere, and it will only matter initially until you get used to it. While timezones are making my life a misery on daily basis when I'm working with collegues around the world. The change would change my daily stationary misery to something more tolerable while for those that actually travel every day it would become a misery.
@mikoi7472
@mikoi7472 2 жыл бұрын
@@flannn6 timezone issues? "Hey what time is it for you?" "6 am est" "Oh cool, lets have our meeting in 5 hours from then alright?" And if you do run into an issue where that time isn't specific from your hours ahead, there are thousands of tools to do the calculations for you if youre not smart enough to do simple addition and subtraction.
@mikoi7472
@mikoi7472 2 жыл бұрын
@@marsovac learn to actually communicate then. Thousands of businesses have world spanning supply chains. And they seem to be running properly when not shut down by the government.
@webm0nk3y
@webm0nk3y 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve been saying this for a while. Since I’ve had to develop applications that schedule people all around the world, time zones combined with daylight savings adjustments make it nearly impossible to make everyone happy.
@enlightenedchipmunk2001
@enlightenedchipmunk2001 2 жыл бұрын
I think our time has a practical utility as is. Especially when considering the global market and work hours. If I’m working with a company in Australia, it’s good to know that I’m not bothering them at 2am about some work related issue. Even though time is technically the same everywhere, our sleep schedules still revolve around the relative position of of the sun. Edit: Not to mention trying to dictate which areas get which time slots. I would imagine everyone would want dibs on their location being the standard for everyone else to adjust around.
@vangoghsseveredear
@vangoghsseveredear 2 жыл бұрын
Good point. Then you can almost guarantee somewhere like China or Russia wouldn't play along and would do their own thing anway
@asmrenjoyer9704
@asmrenjoyer9704 2 жыл бұрын
For knowing that you need to know the time difference between your country and australia. It's gonna be the same time difference, instead to adding to your local time zone you will add it to UTC to know in what time of the day are they in
@Nereosis16
@Nereosis16 2 жыл бұрын
@@asmrenjoyer9704 so what's the benefit of using UTC then if you're still using a freaking timezone to work it out? You didn't solve any problem at all.
@squirrellyme
@squirrellyme 2 жыл бұрын
What time is it in Italy right now? Australia? West US? You probably have to look it up to figure it out regardless. The reason you wouldn't is if you have a constant reason to go/communicate with there(work/family). And if so, this change would go over even easier. It's like learning class rooms in a new school. You'll get a grip, probably faster than you thought.
@Nereosis16
@Nereosis16 2 жыл бұрын
@@squirrellyme so then what benefit is there of using UTC over the current method if you still need to memorise/look up the time difference?
@RiffMusic1970
@RiffMusic1970 2 жыл бұрын
Can you imagine the politics involved in who gets the “normal” time and who has to completely change their time? Wars have been fought over less.
@SonOfTheDawn515
@SonOfTheDawn515 2 жыл бұрын
Nailed it.
@nilavkalita7448
@nilavkalita7448 2 жыл бұрын
i think the 00:00 would still be in prime meridian no?
@maksymisaiev1828
@maksymisaiev1828 Жыл бұрын
@@nilavkalita7448 potentially yeah, everybody accepts UTC, so there should be no war over this. It also works well with magnetic fields of the earth, as they are also cross prime meridian. Issue is only in understanding and relations. UTC is fine for global management, but work-life balance and tourism will be hell with unified time zone.
@Sgtd-hk2sz
@Sgtd-hk2sz 2 жыл бұрын
It’s nice to know when other people in the world are generally awake…when the sun is out. Circadian rhythm dictates our lives for the most part. If it’s 1pm where I live it’s nice to know I’m not interrupting someone else’s sleep if I give them a call in a different time zone.
@BokoMoko65
@BokoMoko65 2 жыл бұрын
If you think of the other side what's east or west from you, the time of day will differ. If you think of the other side what's north or south of you, the season of the year will differ.
@nenmaster5218
@nenmaster5218 2 жыл бұрын
@@BokoMoko65 Meanwhile, the arguably Best social commentary i know: Hbomberguy. Also funny af, tbh.
@Dargonhuman
@Dargonhuman 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly. I have family three time zones away, so when I get out of work at 11pm my time, I know it's 2am their time and I shouldn't call them to wish them a happy birthday (as one example) until a little later in their day. With UTC, I would still know that they're three solar hours away but I would have no idea if 11pm was too early or late to call them without the context of what part of the solar day 11pm represented to them.
@mh0862
@mh0862 2 жыл бұрын
I've been a supporter of going to CUT or Zulu time for over 40 years. By the way, Minnesota has 6 seasons. Spring, summer, fall, winter, winter, winter.
@EricMBlog
@EricMBlog 2 жыл бұрын
I think this just transposes a problem. Sure, a meeting would be a 1pm for everyone, but now I don’t know if that is the middle of the night for the other person.
@jackbauer9901
@jackbauer9901 2 жыл бұрын
This comment section is full of whining programmers that were having a hard time in dealing with different time zones and solely because of that want to get rid of them. That is a short sighted poor excuse. Time zones might be difficult and unnecessary in computing but for humans they make perfect sense for social reasons and when it comes to traveling. Not everything that is "tradition" is bad. It is in place for a reason
@SlimThrull
@SlimThrull 2 жыл бұрын
Two things: 1.) Trying to program for every time zone is impossible. There are too many exceptions and then exceptions to those exceptions. Sometimes two people living next door to one another observe DST at different times. It's literally impossible to have a program deal with all that. And the moment you create one that does? Someone changes a rule somewhere and sends you back to square one. It's a nightmare. So all the "whining programmers" have a very valid point. 2.) Tradition is NOT a good reason to keep doing something. If it's tradition for a reason, then cite the reason. If it's valid, then that's fine. If it isn't, then it should be changed.
@johnmaltz7165
@johnmaltz7165 2 жыл бұрын
@@SlimThrull nah
@SlimThrull
@SlimThrull 2 жыл бұрын
@@johnmaltz7165 Oh, sorry, are we doing one word rebuttals? Here's on for you: Yah.
@johnmaltz7165
@johnmaltz7165 2 жыл бұрын
@@SlimThrull *inserts essay on YT comment section*
@SlimThrull
@SlimThrull 2 жыл бұрын
@@johnmaltz7165 Nah.
@aidenmcmullen56
@aidenmcmullen56 2 жыл бұрын
The problem with removing time zones is that if you travel adjusting to the new times would be a pain jet lag would still be an issue(due to the fact that you would still have to adjust your sleep with the sun). For example if you travel to another state or country without looking up sunrise and sunset times you will have a adjustment period where you don’t know when stores or banks are open or even what time you need to go to sleep I order to be awake when everyone else in that area is. With pill schedules you still have issues with prescriptions making you get up in the middle of the night to take them or maybe during work. Also the argument he makes about calling someone at a specific time is also irrelevant because if you call at one pm that could be in the middle of the night for them and it would still require mental math in order to prevent excess confusion. Ultimately changing to one synchronized time would be about the same on the local level but when traveling it would be a nightmare. It’s convenient to know that most businesses are open from about 7 to 5 and you eat breakfast at 7 or 8 lunch at noon and dinner around 7 or 8. None of the arguments you provided were benefits to changing over. Time zones have a purpose, international relatability.
@stoferb876
@stoferb876 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly. And don't forget that a significant part of the world would then have to start to deal with the confusion of having to switch date and day of the week in the middle of their day.
@FewVidsJustComments
@FewVidsJustComments 2 жыл бұрын
2:20 "almost winter, winter, still winter, and construction" that made me giggle, well done video guy
@h7opolo
@h7opolo 2 жыл бұрын
we dont need to do away with time zones per se, but maybe start to use utc more often when scheduling things that arent localized to a certain time zone.
@GalaxyCat26
@GalaxyCat26 2 жыл бұрын
Yup
@existdissolve
@existdissolve 2 жыл бұрын
Or just use UTC for everything anyway. For a local "zone", it wouldn't make any difference, but would remove a whole pile of unnecessary complication, just for the sake of an arbitrary number on the clock matching up (very imperfectly) with the position of the sun in the sky.
@doBobro
@doBobro 2 жыл бұрын
It will not help. Future events are bound to future configuration of timezones. You can notice that timezones have names and not mere numbers. We need to get reed of DST and political changes to achieve fixed time shifts.
@chuckoneill2023
@chuckoneill2023 2 жыл бұрын
A lot of organizations already do that. During my military service, most logs referenced "Z" time, which is military speak for Greenwich Mean Time.
@nicholashylton6857
@nicholashylton6857 2 жыл бұрын
*_"The Time on your Clock is Meaningless"_* If you have ever been in a waiting room for your doctors appointment or in a line at the Department of Motor vehicles, you will recognize the wisdom of this phrase.
@trescatorce9497
@trescatorce9497 2 жыл бұрын
The DMV is hopeless, however, to reduce the cost of medical care, I propose that your medical fee be reduced 1% for every minute delayed on your appointment. By personal experience, visiting the doctor's office will be a very good way of making money. If you are a hypocondriac, you'll be richer than Warren Buffet
@likebot.
@likebot. 2 жыл бұрын
huh. I've never been in a DMV or a doctor's waiting room that had a clock. I know this because the only thing I travel with that can let me know the time of day is my Honda Civic.
@stuglenn1112
@stuglenn1112 2 жыл бұрын
Life is short enough. Waiting in line makes it seem longer.
@neobaud513
@neobaud513 2 жыл бұрын
Telling time by the sun makes sense to me. The point of clocks is to mark the human daily biological cycle. The sun rise and set controls the cycle right? I think it is more than just tradition.
@2012YoutubeWasBetter
@2012YoutubeWasBetter 2 жыл бұрын
Our circadian rhythm doesnt rhyme with industrial labor production expectations. Industry over life is the motto
@damobbmusiq464
@damobbmusiq464 2 жыл бұрын
Im from the caribbean and back when i was a youth the summer holidays used to be helly long. Two long long months (july-August)of frolicking in the sun.. The days would drag on. Now the days end as quick as they start. Now you have to hustle to do your morning chores before you can make a short getaway to the beach and back for dinner then bed. Back in my youth days we were never worried that rain would ruin our cricket games or our fruit picking shinanigans. Now everythings different. We're aging a hella lot faster. Life is really different.
@elijahryan2934
@elijahryan2934 2 жыл бұрын
I feel like getting rid of time zones would just complicate things. If I want to spontaneously call a friend of mine who is in a time zone eight hours ahead of me, I do simple math to determine whether or not he is likely to be awake. I won't call him at 6 pm my time, because that would be 2 am for him. However, if time zones didn't exist, I wouldn't have any concept of when in the day it is for other time zones. Also, time zones just help add stability. If someone was born and raised in one place they would always associate 12:00 am with a certain time of day. If they were to move far away, in a very different time zone, 12:00 am would be a completely different time of day. They would have to relearn what each hour time meant. And while yes, that person would eventually get used to it, it just adds an unnecessary complication. And really, time zones as they are aren't that hard. As long as you have access to Google, it's pretty easy to figure out.
@Gielderst
@Gielderst 2 жыл бұрын
Time zones are easy. Cause west = back east = forth So it's just a matter of looking up how far back or forth you need to adjust your clock for a given location. On the other hand having no time zones would require the person to imagine what time of the day it is for the same time number everywhere. And i think that's just stupid. For example. What sense does it make for there the time to be 02:49 where i'm from which is at night. And when it's the same 02:49 let's say in Japan. Then that would mean that it's noon or afternoon there. But how am i supposed to know or even imagine that and by how much. It just makes no sense there to be the same time number for the whole planet. I just think that's dumb cause it makes it way harder to tell if it's morning, noon, afternoon, evening or night and by how much. Time zones are superior. On the other hand maybe the daylight time change could be taken out but even that's no big deal cause it's just 1 hour difference. So i think time is just fine the way it is.
@electronresonator8882
@electronresonator8882 2 жыл бұрын
we can use the Earth equator circumference and plot it to a 360 degree circle, and map each country according to that degree, so if you're at 180 degree and it's day time you should now that near 0 degree is night time
@alkismavridis1
@alkismavridis1 2 жыл бұрын
This makes no sense to me. With or without timezones, you need to make a calculation to know what the situation is ina different part of the world. Infact, the calculation is pretty much the same in both cases. So, timezones just make communication harder because the labels we use to describe time are inconsistent. It is just that we have got used to a messed up model so we cannot even imagine how a better one would function.
@elijahryan2934
@elijahryan2934 2 жыл бұрын
@@electronresonator8882 Using degrees would work to give a rough estimate, but to the layman, what meaningful difference is there between degree 180 and degree 195? It's very abstract. On the other hand, everyone has a clear idea of the difference between 8:15 and 9:15.
@elijahryan2934
@elijahryan2934 2 жыл бұрын
@@Gielderst Exactly!
@jdogg5639
@jdogg5639 2 жыл бұрын
The time zone lines may be too arbitrarily drawn, but I'd argue there's way more benefit to time zones than the alternative. Every human on the planet has a (roughly) common experience with what time label to use for different parts of the day. Every human has (roughly) the same definition of what "12:00 noon" means, as in what it looks like outside, whether most people are awake or sleeping, whether most people are working or resting, whether most people are eating dinner or breakfast, etc - so that "X o'clock" label is a description of the current state of life and can easily be translated to other parts of the world after applying a time zone offset. 3pm is roughly the same state of life for most everyone on the planet. Differences in latitude, the axial tilt, and the wild off-longitude swings in the time zone lines don't make it a perfect translation, but it's a pretty good starting point. When regularly working/communicating with people around the world, "what time is it there?" is ALWAYS the first thing you think about because that hourly label means something useful. If I need to call someone in a different time zone, I do have to know the difference in time zones between us, but once I offset the difference from my time I intuitively know what part of the day the other person is experiencing in their time zone, because we both have the same label. If instead we're both on UTC, it's not that the calculation becomes difficult, it's just less intuitive. Instead of calculating the offset and knowing "they're in X part of their day", I'd apply the offset to the current time and know "they are in the part of their day that I will experience at X time later today/or did experience at X time earlier today".
@existdissolve
@existdissolve 2 жыл бұрын
Your first paragraph is completely undermined by China. China has one timezone. And China is HUGE. And has over a billion people. So no, "most" people on earth don't have the same definition of "noon"...roughly 200,000,000 people (that's quite a few!) at least (assuming likely 5 timezones if China were divided) have a completely different notion. In terms of the calculations with a standard time, you simply don't have to do any...that's the point! Sure, you have to have some knowledge of their situation and a basic understanding of how the earth rotates...but you already had to have that in the current mess, PLUS do math! So eliminate the math and just simplify the issue!
@jesselloyd207
@jesselloyd207 2 жыл бұрын
@existdissolve China crosses only about 3 timezones, so their noon is from 11am to 1pm relative to a ship due south in the ocean which has those timezones. It’s daylight and the sun is high in the sky at 12:00 noon in China for everyone.
@bmwolfe2786
@bmwolfe2786 2 жыл бұрын
That would break how we communicate. You can’t just say “ugh i was up till 3 last night” because it would mean nothing. You would have to invent new words to stand in for the time and people would just end up using those instead of the actual time. We care more collectively about being able to connect and relate to each other than being accurate. I like the idea but it would never work. Meetings would be easier and writing programs and tech would all be easier, but i think our day to day language would change to fight it. Then you have to write code to relate times to those words … which would vary base on place… and all that time you saved goes right back to writing that crap.
@Youkai9
@Youkai9 2 жыл бұрын
That "ugh" says a lot more to me than "up until 3 last night", because it communicates tiredness and I know a lot of people who would be comfortable with staying up all night and going to sleep at 3pm. Also, were you talking about 3pm or 3am? Or are we using 24 hour clock? Even if we use conventional pattern of talking about time the language stays a problem. You could've said "I was up until very late last night" and it would've been more informative, relatable and accurate, no inventions needed. Accuracy of your language increases your relatablitiy I would argue. For example: Metaphors are accurate, not in scientific sense but accurate in a sense of trying to relate human experience of the world.
@bmwolfe2786
@bmwolfe2786 2 жыл бұрын
@@Youkai9 Yea, good point. The "ugh" definitely conveys most of what you're saying. So, one would just assume that 3 is late, and they would assume it's 3am, just from that "ugh" (current system I mean). So, no you wouldn't "need" to invent anything...but... what I want to happen and what I think would happen are different though. I just think it would be a shit show, based on how immaturely we tend to react to everything LOL. Groups will form... people who are down to change and people who love the old way. I mean give it a few years and it will be like nothing ever happened... it will all just work because we also have short memories, so people will forget it was any other way. Someone would just need to have the balls to pull the trigger and put in the necessary work to change the zeitgeist. But it will totally be a shit show for a bit., and I guess my point is... would it be worth it? I mean maybe? Put it this way... for the love of god don't do it right now lol. Wait for a less insane batch of humans to emerge... or maybe wait till we go cybernetic. edit:: also, I mean, you've seen what it looks like when the gov tries to make a website. That's kinda where I'm coming from haha
@Nereosis16
@Nereosis16 2 жыл бұрын
@@Youkai9 so lets me less specific with language? Because I say "ugh I had to wake up at 10am" does that make me lazy or did I wake up super early? You have no idea. Getting rid of timezones has no benefit
@squirrellyme
@squirrellyme 2 жыл бұрын
​@@Nereosis16 You need to know when people wake up, so you can tell if they're lazy? That's your argument?
@shashankhrishikesh1573
@shashankhrishikesh1573 2 жыл бұрын
Screw time zones. I've been telling people that a lot and you are the first person to actually agree with me
@kylben
@kylben 2 жыл бұрын
"More precise than its weight driven counterparts" pendulums are regulators, not drivers. Pendulum clocks still used weights to drive them. Its like saying "Engines with fuel injectors are more efficient than their gasoline powered counterparts"
@skeetersaurus6249
@skeetersaurus6249 2 жыл бұрын
Agreed..and since Pendulums work based on gravitational force (acting on the pendulum arm via centrifugal force), they (in theory) should be no more accurate than simple 'chain-hang' weights (both keep the clock spring working against the internals through a ratchet mechanism). It wasn't that the 'pendulum clocks' were any more accurate because of the mechanism, but that the internals of the mechanism became more precise and refined...that's all. It's not like a pendulum clock functions in a direct relation to the Equation of Time...it is simply working in relation to local gravity, length of the pendulum arm (adjustable by a length screw acting on the pendulum arm as a micro-adjuster) and its actions related to the swing of the pendulum.
@rseed42
@rseed42 2 жыл бұрын
Just ask programmers about the huge PITA in dealing with time zones, DST, and so on. I am all for just using UTC, but not sure yet if we can also adapt to a decimal hour system :).
@imusthegreat
@imusthegreat 2 жыл бұрын
speaking as a programmer only DST is a pain. For everything else you just use unix time and let the OS convert it to readable time format. Nothing difficult about that. Speaking of unix time, hey look 1 globaly used standard time notation without timezones!
@sharmaarjuna2169
@sharmaarjuna2169 2 жыл бұрын
Tom Scott made a good video about this issue in the programmation
@jamie0
@jamie0 2 жыл бұрын
Just ask computer progammers and they'll answer "that's what computers are for". Computers love UTC because they have no connection to this planet, this star, this solar system. Humans do.
@alexsanchez1620
@alexsanchez1620 2 жыл бұрын
@@jamie0 I mean the computers are as much of the stars kids as we are
@TheTwick
@TheTwick 2 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid in the 1950s I used to set my watch by tuning into “The National Bureau for Standard WWV” on my shortwave radio. That pleasing pulsating beat of the nation’s “clock” and the automated reading of “at the tone the correct time will be…”. I loved that clock - I set my wristwatch and room clocks and always reminded people that only I had “the correct time” - I did get beat up now and then but mostly because of my glasses. #NerdsUnite #GetRidOfTimeZones
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
That's such a fun story! Thanks for sharing 🙂
@adarshmohapatra5058
@adarshmohapatra5058 2 жыл бұрын
I swear, I remember having the most accurate time in class was such a flex.
@grayaj23
@grayaj23 2 жыл бұрын
The son of a friend of mine had some pretty serious OCD issues, so he took a nosedive into obsessing about accurate time when he was around 11 years old. He wore two watches until I made the mistake of telling him the joke "A man with a watch always knows what time it is. A man with two is never sure". So he started wearing three. He outgrew it a couple of years later.
@Zireael83
@Zireael83 2 жыл бұрын
@@grayaj23 thats a fun story too :D thanks for sharing
@nerd31415926535
@nerd31415926535 2 жыл бұрын
Did you compensate for the time it took those radio waves to travel from Fort Collins to your radio and through its circuits to the speakers? And the even longer time it took the sound from the speakers to reach your ears and your brain to perceive it? if you did, it wasn't your glasses :-)
@donniewatson9120
@donniewatson9120 2 жыл бұрын
Actually, the clocks in a time zone only match the sun in a narrow band area of each timezone. The borders of the timezones are roughly a half hour ahead or behind the sun depending on which side you're on. And that is if you don't take into account some of the weird off shoots that some timezones have due to even more politics.
@pbp6741
@pbp6741 2 жыл бұрын
Don’t normally disagree but you’ve stepped over the edge. As someone with clients around the world time zones are wonderful when traveling. Change the watch one time on the plane and I know when the hands say 9am I can expect the client to be in his office, at noon I know people are likely eating lunch and I can avoid rush hour traffic by staying off the streets at five. UTC is always available for operations that need it.
@existdissolve
@existdissolve 2 жыл бұрын
I really don't understand what the difference would be with a shared "time". You would call "rush hour" by a different label than before, but would avoid the unnecessary changing of your watch. Easy.
@RGMadu
@RGMadu 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I like those videos a lot, but this one I stopped at 1 minute, because definitely does not make sense. Time zones are a relative sense of the day coordinated with a clock.
@brianegendorf2023
@brianegendorf2023 2 жыл бұрын
Either way, you still have to be aware of time differences. Even if it was 1 PM at the same time everywhere, some places would have a sunrise 1 PM, some would have a Lunch 1 PM, and some would have a sunset 1 PM. And there would also be wake up and go to sleep 1 PMs. You would still need to know that your Sunset 1 PM is still someone's sleep 1 PM or someone's Lunch 1 PM. In the long run , I think that would be an even bigger mess than just having time zones. Otherwise, every time would need Wakeup Standard Time, Sunrise Standard Time, Lunch Standard Time, Sunset Standard Time, Sleep Standard Time. And what do we call the times in between those? General Standard Time? Can I call you at !0 AM Lunch Standard Time so I can catch you at 10 AM JBEOWST (Just Before End of Work Standard Time)?
@pXnTilde
@pXnTilde 2 жыл бұрын
The "local noon" idea literally leads to the re-invention of time zones, too. People will start saying things like "1 hour after local sunrise" and next thing you know there's a convenient table to look up the deviation from your sunrise, and ultimately deviation from a standard sunrise. Perhaps the sunrise in Greenwich. And to make things easier for people who live in nearby political divisions they can just agree to use the same offset since give or take an hour isn't a big deal. Timezone problem... solved?😳
@Dargonhuman
@Dargonhuman 2 жыл бұрын
We would have to reimplement the exact same timezone system we have now, only with different names to account for the shape of the globe and how that affects the solar day cycle, and it would only benefit a tiny fraction of people who interact with other people internationally.
@runrickyrun157
@runrickyrun157 2 жыл бұрын
There is value in having a shared experience tied to time of how we pass our days. For things like movies or just understanding an anecdote easily, it makes sense to have a quick understanding of the section of the day without having to consider in how many hours someone might be waking up. If I know it's 3am there, I don't call. But if I have to figure out how many hours ahead they are and do that math....
@sammic76
@sammic76 2 жыл бұрын
This video is fabulous! I learned lots of cool stuff & "tradition' had me rolling! Thank you for educating me. Subscribed.
@prom3t
@prom3t 2 жыл бұрын
There's one advantage for timezones : regardless of where someone lives in the world, they can say "it was 10am" and people from all over the world immediately have a general sense of what part of the day this was for them. Without timezones you'd need to know where the person was on the globe, and also have an idea of what a typical day schedule looks like over there.
@Crimsonraziel
@Crimsonraziel 2 жыл бұрын
Easily replaced by x hours before/after sunrise/midday/sunset/midnight/dusk/dawn/noon/lunch/whatever. This is precise enough to get a general sense and does not require timezones at all. When I have to choose between easier logistics or easier storytelling I don't have to think twice.
@alexsanchez1620
@alexsanchez1620 2 жыл бұрын
i mean thats not true at all though 10 am is different everywhere even when timezones are factored for. 10 am in alaska is nothing like being near the equator
@Nereosis16
@Nereosis16 2 жыл бұрын
@@Crimsonraziel Easily? You know what's easy? Timezones. There's nothing easy about saying oh I woke up 5 hours before mid day. What the hell does that mean in northern Norway in the middle of winter? It means you never woke up. Sure, 10 am in Norway is still dark but it's still 10am and can be identified. Also, how are you going to determine when midday was? Using the internet most likely. Just search the freaking timezone then!
@ha5921
@ha5921 2 жыл бұрын
Silly ball earthers .... flying in your airplanet bending time ,light , horizons and words .
@Crimsonraziel
@Crimsonraziel 2 жыл бұрын
​@@Nereosis16 This is a joke, right? 10am literally refers to midday! 10am conveys no other message than "2 hours before midday" or "10 hours after midnight". You just told me, that during polar night without the sun you can not figure out "midday" and "10am" lost its descriptive power. So all it is, is a label and like all labels it can be swapped for another one. Sure, 13:00 Worldtime in Norway is still dark but it's still 13:00 Worldtime and can be identified. "Also, how are you going to determine when midday was? Using the internet most likely. Just search the freaking timezone then!" That's the whole point! If we wanted to make an appointment no one had to search up the frickin timezones and maybe even look up when which country switches daylight saving time, because apparently this differs too. No - you would just say "At 15:00?". You would know this is midday, because this is always midday in your country and you got accustomed to it, just like you are accustomed to 12pm being midday right now. This is not more difficult than winter being in july in Australia. Maybe I wouldn't know that "15:00" is midday in your country, but - and this might surprise you - in most cases this would be utterly irrelevant, because what matters to me is what "15:00" means for me. And because I'm accustomed to "15:00" being evening in my country I intuitively know what this time means for my day. Everyone involved knows when the event starts and at no point did anyone even think about timezones or had to know where you are located at just to have a zoom call. On the other hand, if you wanted to tell me, your daughter got home from a party at 10am you could say 2 hours before midday or lunch and it would convey message even better. You would know it was 2 hours before midday because your clock told you "13:00" and you are accustomed to "15:00" being midday in your country. This even works during polar night because basically everyone in the industrialised world looks at the clock to check if it's lunch time anyways. Do you on cloudy days search the sky for the sun to assess whether it is time for lunch? I bet not. You got used to have lunch when the clock says "12pm", you can get used to have lunch when the clock says "15:00".
@MegaLordGaben
@MegaLordGaben 2 жыл бұрын
2:20 As a Michigander myself, this is pretty accurate.
@hiddenpilot7512
@hiddenpilot7512 2 жыл бұрын
Same
@genshinsbizzareadventures
@genshinsbizzareadventures Жыл бұрын
Michigander
@watamatafoyu
@watamatafoyu 2 жыл бұрын
I can't fix time, but renaming October to Skeletor would be helpful.
@GuardianTactician
@GuardianTactician 2 жыл бұрын
Have to agree. October means the "eighth month", but because of two Roman Emperors, it is the tenth month.
@AnnoyingNewsletters
@AnnoyingNewsletters Жыл бұрын
I was stationed at Fort Wainwright, Fairbanks, Alaska, for 3 years. The sun 🌞 gets really interesting at the poles. In the summer the sun _might_ set in the North behind the ski hill around 1am, if it bothered to set at all. Then it'd rise again around 3am, so it was a perpetual pastel sunsetrise, like something from a Thomas Kincaid painting. However, in the winter the sun would rise in the South over the airfield around 10am, and it'd set around 2pm, never getting more than a hand span above the horizon.
@JanKentaur
@JanKentaur 2 жыл бұрын
I think that the concept of time zones is ok. I live in central Europe so my time wouldn't change by much if the whole world accepted UTC but I think at this point most people are pretty used to the concept and I wouldn't say it causes many issues. Jet lag would still be a problem even if we accepted UTC everywhere because it is caused by the change of daily schedule compared to your biological clock, not by the change on your watch. On the other hand, if we ever get to the point when we start travelling to different planets, we will have to accept different definitions of time since the second is now pretty much tuned to the mean solar day but that won't be very useful for someone, say, on Mars.
@MJ-em_jay
@MJ-em_jay 2 жыл бұрын
I think we like to wake, go through the day, then go to bed in the same day of the week. Living on UTC is great for people in Europe, but not so much for people in the western Pacific. Who wants to live in part of the world where the switch from Tuesday to Wednesday is midway through a wake cycle?
@davidweihe6052
@davidweihe6052 2 жыл бұрын
The answer is obvious. No more years, no more months, no more days, only seconds since the Epoch, when Unix time() == 0 (Jan 1, 1970 00:00:00), with no more corrections for Leap Seconds, either. How can you tell that I am a professional computer programmer without my saying it?
@Toshiro_Mifune
@Toshiro_Mifune 2 жыл бұрын
"it doesn't care if we call it october or skeletor..." yup, you got a sub pal.
@kaimln
@kaimln 2 жыл бұрын
SKELETOR!!!
@flash1652
@flash1652 2 жыл бұрын
As a programmer, time zones are a pain in the ass and I whole heartedly agree with this video. I already had this idea and told some friends about it, I'm glad I'm not the only one that has this idea.
@tf8896
@tf8896 2 жыл бұрын
Nice, another video that definitely wont cause my n-th existential crisis this week. /sarc
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
😂 Sorry, not sorry.
@cabefinn
@cabefinn 2 жыл бұрын
If we switched to UTC people would still be required to do conversions to figure out when to organize a meeting. I can’t tell you how many times someone in another part of the world emailed me in the middle of the night, only to send a follow up half an hour later asking me why I hadn’t responded yet. Besides, there a world clock built right into windows.
@philippenachtergal6077
@philippenachtergal6077 2 жыл бұрын
Having time zones has various benefits. When you travel, you change your clock as you are told to and you now immediately have a vague but rather good idea as to when shops and services are open. If you read a story about someone working from 8PM to 2AM or someone's home being searched at 3AM etc, you know the story is talking about night times. Sure, it also means that if you have a satellite that can catch TV form the other side of the world, program hours given by the TV won't mean anything to you until you correct for the time zone. It also means that you remember big global events according to your own time zone. On balance, I believe that time zones are better than using UTC. Now daylight saving time is a nightmare. Not in my own personal life, a 1 hour adjustment twice a year is nothing for me. But when you need to know what time it is on the other side of the world according to both latitude and longitude it's quite tricky without a computer or smartphone
@dannf4077
@dannf4077 2 жыл бұрын
Here is the 'Existential' problems with having a single representation of time world wide. Today we can look at a table (or have multiple clocks on our wall or on our watch) that tells us what time it is in Japan or Ecuador where our business partners live. That lets us compare, instantly, our day with their day, e.g. "Oh, it is 4 am there, so I need to wait another three or four hours before she will be at her office before calling her about our wonderful new algorithm. I think I will have to call her after lunch." So by knowing that different time I can know when and how to act. And then If we add a new partner in Indonesia all I need is a new 'clock' for them and I can respect their schedule as well. Or, If I travel on business across three time zones I only need change one clock, my own, their clocks do not change, i can still understand what they are probably doing by looking at 'their' clock. With a single, Universal 'clock' I have to do the rather complex math to understand if my call will be appreciated or a blatant annoyance. Or I will need to memorize an hour by hour schedule of two or three or perhaps a billion people.. (when do I run the breakfast food ads?). For example, even today, I get spam calls from Florida (on the east coast) at 5 AM, because the person calling me does not realize that Washington is a State (on the west Coast) ... and is not in the District of Columbia (east coast). With Universal Time and spammers world wide, I would never get any sleep. “And yet it moves.” A quote attributed to the renowned scientist Galileo Galilei in 1633... and it is still valid.
@nirmolmunvar6939
@nirmolmunvar6939 2 жыл бұрын
It's amazing how deep we can go in such a topic.
@Flowy653
@Flowy653 2 жыл бұрын
this is hardly intro into basics about time tracking
@Realturboterrapin
@Realturboterrapin 2 жыл бұрын
I think you're making a larger problem out of timezones than you need to. For general purpose use timezones work perfectly fine. Sure there are areas that don't follow by their actual timezones but that fault does not lie within the zones themselves. I think ultimately timezones are a product of ease rather than tradition, I don't follow timezones because of some clock overlords, I follow them because they're the most convenient for understanding the time where I am. If you have to shift times for UTC anyways, then you haven't fixed the problem, you've just given it a new coat of paint.
@cassiebrown2005
@cassiebrown2005 2 жыл бұрын
He also stated that it's just an opinion. I think instead of saying things like he is making a bigger problem out of it when the video is only for entertainment. If we think what he is telling us is wrong then simply click off of the video and don't watch it :)
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
In response to what @Cassie Brown is saying: While getting rid of time zones is just a personal opinion of mine, I'd like to say that I _am_ open to counterarguments as long as they're civil. Your critique seems ok 👍. Unfortunately, a lot of people in the comments are getting very angry at me, which seems like an overreaction. It's not like I have the authority or influence to enact any of this.
@Realturboterrapin
@Realturboterrapin 2 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceAsylum hey no worries, I have no problem with people stating their opinions or having conversations about why things are the way that they are. You have your own ideas about how well this would work, and I have my own. I don't agree with people who are rude just because they disagree with someone, especially over something like timezones. That behavior is unacceptable when dealing with adults, and I do not condone the people in the comments who are acting in such a way.
@HurricaneBliss
@HurricaneBliss 2 жыл бұрын
The point that he is making is time doesn't matter
@Nereosis16
@Nereosis16 2 жыл бұрын
@@HurricaneBliss yeah it's arbitrary. That's absolutely fine. We can use arbitrary things. We don't need to have everything be 100% logical at all times. Timezones provide a localised time system that brings the world together. It's super simple to work out what time it is in another country by simple addition of subtraction. If we moved to UTC it would be impossible to determine this without using some form of sun chart but then you're still having to use a system to determine the time of day so you pretty much just invented a different form of timezones.
@Mitobu1
@Mitobu1 2 жыл бұрын
Time zones give us an idea of what stage of the daily routine somebody else is at. Knowing somebody else's time zone let's you know whether you will be calling them when they would typically be at work, eating, sleeping, etc. without needing to have the specifics of their daily schedule or the typical schedules of their location. It's good to have UTC as an option, say if you need to schedule something, but for impromptu meetings, knowing the difference in point of day makes it so you can tailor your conversation accordingly and avoid interrupting regular tasks.
@angeldude101
@angeldude101 2 жыл бұрын
And then you have people who completely ignore the sun and just follow their own schedule. For these people, timezones only give an illusion of knowing where they are during their day, when really their "noon" would be be what the timezone says is 3 or 4 o'clock.
@TechnoMinarchist
@TechnoMinarchist 2 жыл бұрын
@@angeldude101 True but such lifestyles mess with their mental and biological health. We aren't a nocturnal species.
@Dargonhuman
@Dargonhuman 2 жыл бұрын
@@angeldude101 Speaking as a night owl myself who keeps later hours than most people, having the contextual information that time zones provide as a framework for "normal" circadian cycles is invaluable and would be lost with UTC. For me, 11pm is early, but for my family on the other side of the country, that's 2am and they're likely already in bed so I know I shouldn't call them.
@kevinmithnick9993
@kevinmithnick9993 2 жыл бұрын
Don't forget circadian rhythm. For those who don't know Refers to your internal clock (yes, there is a timekeeper inside of you) synchronized mainly by sunlight. So keeping those time zones have a biological reason
@75IFFY
@75IFFY 2 жыл бұрын
Doing away with time zones would be pointless when considering business and trade. Everyone locally, likely in a state or country would all be considering a particular time as business hours in order to coordinate in your area, just like time zones. But i do love the idea of not having to bother with time zone conversion, i missed out on jobs because i screwed up on time zones.
@9jmorrison
@9jmorrison 2 жыл бұрын
UTC is amazing confusing to extrapolate the events when communicating or travelling. Basically the problem still exists. I think ending DLS is a good idea and maybe consolation of some time zones, make them larger.
@mal2ksc
@mal2ksc 2 жыл бұрын
Having been project manager for an international collaboration, I can say that UTC is the worst system to arrange meetings, except for all the other ones that have been tried.
@afseraph
@afseraph 2 жыл бұрын
I've always liked the idea of a single time zone across the world. Though I must admit, incrementing calendar day during working hours would be a pain for many people.
@Flowy653
@Flowy653 2 жыл бұрын
1 time zone = no time savings = no incrementing = you just come hour sooner to work the next day, technically no change
@cadekachelmeier7251
@cadekachelmeier7251 2 жыл бұрын
"Let's meet up on Saturday" "Great! Wait, early Saturday or late Saturday. Because I have work or late Friday/early Saturday." "Man, I wish our days somehow corresponded to a continuous period of time when people were awake and active to avoid this problem."
@existdissolve
@existdissolve 2 жыл бұрын
@@cadekachelmeier7251 Why is that a problem? If 2pm is 2pm everywhere, then "2pm Saturday" is "2pm Saturday" everywhere as well. It's a whole lot easier to deal with than the current scenario where it's Saturday in one country and Sunday in another.
@cadekachelmeier7251
@cadekachelmeier7251 2 жыл бұрын
@@existdissolve In California, the UTC day rolls over at 5PM. So their normal day may be to get up Monday 3PM and go to sleep Tuesday 5AM. So now saying "Let's do something on Monday" is really ambiguous. Does that mean late on what is now Sunday or early on what is now Monday? Having the day roll over when people are asleep is actually a good thing that helps people communicate practical ideas.
@existdissolve
@existdissolve 2 жыл бұрын
@@cadekachelmeier7251 Agree to disagree. The example seems relevant because it's asked through the assumptions of a "day" in the current mess of time keeping. If you remove the mess so that everyone's talking about the same thing, regardless of their position on the earth (or really anywhere in the solar system), there is no issue. Obviously, if you're trying to do something on "Monday" with someone from Kansas meeting someone from Australia, the details would be murky...but they're even murkier in the current system, since my Monday in Kansas might already be Tuesday in Australia. That's way more confusing than if "Monday" actually referred to the same thing.
@stephenblake8073
@stephenblake8073 2 жыл бұрын
The earth day hasn't always been 23 hours 53minutes long. It started out as approximately 5 hours long 4.1 billion years ago and has been getting longer ever since, due to the tidal effects of the moon (which also been slowing down and at the same time moving away from earth) acting as a drag on the Earth's rotation.
@JRabba1995
@JRabba1995 2 жыл бұрын
Sure, we should use UTC more often to schedule events but I still think that time zones would be. Your argument Nick is that it would not matter if job time switches from 9-5 to 2-10 and I agree, it wouldnt matter. However there would still be geopolitical divisions where people work from 2-10, 3-11, 4-12 etc. so people would still be required to switch behaviours from "time zone" to "time zone". Instead of remembering each region's "9 to 5" we now shift our clocks instead so there is less to remember. It is easier in my mind.
@SkylerLinux
@SkylerLinux 2 жыл бұрын
Well since my Provence has once again failed to be rid of this Saving nonsense, and my smartphone and smartwatch will just change. I'm not sure how much remembering there is to do. You think that the new "time zone" will be when people work, however I work 0000hrs to 0800hrs everynight so when I want to say do some in-person banking during banking hours. I have to get up in the middle of the [day] to get my roll of laundry coins, disrupting my sleep.
@arcanus_illuminare
@arcanus_illuminare 2 жыл бұрын
We could also make it 9-3, 10-4, 11-5, or something. Personally, I would mind having time to lounge in the morning.
@spifi1000
@spifi1000 2 жыл бұрын
right, and one more flaw would be, that timezones could also never die, because multi national companys had to write down thair workingtimes in each and every place in the world, so what would they do? They have to change the company papers from "we are working 9 to 5 on this planet" to "we are working 0 to 8 in timezone A, 1 to 9 in timezone B, 2 to 10 in timezone C ...", so there will be challenges :D ... all over my gut feeling is, it doesnt matter if we change the clock or the behaviors...
@paradox7358
@paradox7358 2 жыл бұрын
I spent a lot of money on this watch, thank you. Now you're telling me I shouldn't have bothered?
@CLipka2373
@CLipka2373 2 жыл бұрын
I've had dealings with time zone computations as a software programmer. F*** time zones, I say! Though, to be honest, I'm really more on board with just "f*** how time and time zones are handled by software language standards". And things seem to be improving recently. I guess the real implementation hurdle of a single worldwide time zone wouldn't so much be the TIME of day, but rather the DATE. Not that I have any stakes in this personally, provided the adopted time zone would be UTC - I live not far, and don't care whether the date rollover is an hour off from local midnight. But I guess I would have quite strong opinions if it would result in my days (sunrise to sunset) starting on one date and ending on another. "Do you have any plans for Saturday yet?" - "Which one? The Friday/Saturday, or the Saturday/Sunday?" I would find that rather bonkers.
@CLipka2373
@CLipka2373 2 жыл бұрын
@Craig Carmichael Meh. Let's just go straight timestamps instead. For the sake of science, let's not tamper with the SI second as the base unit of time though. While we're at it, let's also ditch that pesky POSIX time. TAI all the way! Death to UTC and leap seconds!
@demoniack81
@demoniack81 2 жыл бұрын
@Craig Carmichael Why are you doing calculations with individual time components? Either use the standard library or just convert everything to millis and then convert it back to whatever unit you need.
@dcterr1
@dcterr1 2 жыл бұрын
What you're saying makes perfect sense, that time zones are archaic and based on a long tradition of having our measurement of time follow the Sun. Unfortunately I don't think were anywhere nearly ready to get rid of time zones. It'll probably even take a few decades to get rid of Daylight Savings!
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
Fair point.
@jstnrgrs
@jstnrgrs 2 жыл бұрын
"Welcome to Tokyo, where the local time is the same at it was when we left New York." (Checks watch.) Oh good, it's about lunch time. Let me call my friend.
@whitexicanat-large681
@whitexicanat-large681 2 жыл бұрын
I have had that thought for some time now, but having only one time zone has a big flaw. It would be a confusing mess to figure out if it's morning or evening on another part of the planet. Imagine traveling for a vacation and asking what time is it. The number would be meaningless and you would have to do some math all day to figure out what time of the day is over there. I think the best solution is to implement UTC as well as local time in anything that spans two or more timezones, like airline tickets, conferences, live events etc.
@reverendmothercheryl2276
@reverendmothercheryl2276 2 жыл бұрын
I fully agree! I also advocate getting rid of “am” and “pm” in favour of a 24 hour clock. I’ve already converted to the latter as has most of the world. It’s a short step toward the longer step of going to UTC.
@dogma8538
@dogma8538 2 жыл бұрын
yessir!!
@ericp0012
@ericp0012 2 жыл бұрын
I agree, but it would be difficult for some countries, such as the USA; to switch to a 24 hour clock format or what most people in the USA call military time. UTC/GMT would also be a long term goal to promote one time zone. In addition, we need to address if we keep daylights savings time.
@seanbrown207
@seanbrown207 2 жыл бұрын
Time zones are fine even though from an implementation standpoint they’re complicated. I personally think switching to UTC would be more confusing than people realize or would like to admit - “noon” could be at 24:00. I like the idea of industry using UTC. They can do whatever they want if a certain practice is easier for them.
@angeldude101
@angeldude101 Жыл бұрын
24:00 doesn't exist, but what's the issue with having noon at 0:00? Where I am today, noon is technically 20:14. That isn't even on the hour, or even the half hour or quarter hour, nor is it the same each day.
@kevlarandchrome
@kevlarandchrome 2 жыл бұрын
Humans are generally diurnal. In an era of instant mass communication, time zones help me to intuitively know not to call my friend who lives on the West Coast four hours before sunrise when he's fast asleep and has to get up for work at 6am in his time zone, even though it's already 6am in mine. It's not based on "tradition" it's based on the biological operation of most human beings.
@alkismavridis1
@alkismavridis1 2 жыл бұрын
Without timezonez, you will have to make the conversion and see whether it is night or day in your friend's place. In fact, with timezones too you must do a conversion to calculate what is the time in your friend's place sooo... nothing would get worse by getting rid of them. In both cases you have to make a calculation and figure out what the situation is in a different part of the world. Also, nothing biological would change - only the labels we use would change. They would get more consistent.
@sreese1988
@sreese1988 2 жыл бұрын
“What if we had one world time?” The tinfoil hat crazies are going to be convinced that Nick is a part of the Illuminati now😂 Also, big fan of the show tunes. No one in my house appreciates when I sing Fiddler on the Roof!
@nenmaster5218
@nenmaster5218 2 жыл бұрын
Best social commentary i know: Hbomberguy. Also funny af, tbh.
@pierreschambacher1564
@pierreschambacher1564 2 жыл бұрын
I want 13 months of 28 days and only one time zone, from the middle of the Pacific because there's no reason to give Brits the benefit of keeping GMT.
@GalaxyCat26
@GalaxyCat26 2 жыл бұрын
😂🤣
@leftmono1016
@leftmono1016 2 жыл бұрын
It's not a real benefit to be honest, it's very much overrated.
@BokoMoko65
@BokoMoko65 2 жыл бұрын
I want 12 months of 30 days and a "New Year week" of 5 (or 6) days. One single time all over the world.
@RoccosVideos
@RoccosVideos 2 жыл бұрын
Every time I get a new boss they “fix” a bunch of things that aren’t really broken, this gave me déjà vu.
@jhcoverdrive9287
@jhcoverdrive9287 2 жыл бұрын
I would honestly have to put some real thought into this, lol. As someone who takes multiple prescriptions (2 of which are pretty time sensitive), currently lives with DST and has been all over the country several times on cross-country trips; its never been an issue. Sure, 15-20 years ago you'd have to set your watch or clock in the car when you crossed time zones and have to remember to set them for DST. You knew when time changes were coming because people griped and they were on the calendar, time zones make a little sense to me so I never thought of them as a negative. All that said, I'm totally fine chucking DST to the wayside but I'd really have to think about going strictly UTC. I get it from a utilitarian standpoint but I do believe time-zones serve some purpose more than just politics. It'll be legit interesting to mull that one over in my mind over the coming days as I've actually never really thought about it.
@Andrew90046zero
@Andrew90046zero 2 жыл бұрын
This isn’t a “human problem”, this is a “the world is round” problem. Many people prefer to wake up at certain times, and want their clocks to reflect that. The way we live our lives should dictate what the time is, not the other way around. In one place in the world, someone is sleeping, and in another place, someone is working, and it’s not very fair to force everyone to work all at the same time and also all have the same time. One place in the world would end up having the “normal” time while while everyone else has to deal with a offset time, and not having as much convince as the people on the one slice of the globe. Ultimately, I can only see “forced UTC” as just shifting the problem, your not actually solving anything. The existing issue of dealing with the sun being in different places doesn’t go away. Unless you force everyone to live on a fraction of earths surface, purely for the sake of convenience. I do think people using UTC to talk about time when sun position is irrelevant is a useful thing. But at the end of the day, some people are sleeping and others are not, unless you want the earth to be flat.. so not everyone can be available at the same time for your convenience. This is not an issue of following the sun, it’s an issue of the world just being the way it is, and finding the best solution, which we kinda already have. In a similar parallel, a globe can never be perfectly mapped to a 2d surface. So there are no perfect solutions. Maybe the same is true for planet time. I mean, Mars rovers use Mars time!
@kage769
@kage769 2 жыл бұрын
"But they could just take an average of those and call it a day." At that moment, I remembered to give my thumbs up.
@kendomyers
@kendomyers 2 жыл бұрын
And we know that eating your own scat is highly intelligent, so...
@kage769
@kage769 2 жыл бұрын
@Rheumattica ... Numbers are a language we use to interpret the universe, and biology definity has its uses. Otherwise, did I do something to offend you?
@twylanaythias
@twylanaythias 2 жыл бұрын
In brief, yes - we need time zones. Human beings are naturally diurnal; not merely because our eyes function poorly in dim lighting conditions, but virtually every aspect of our psychological evolution is tied to it as well. Not only do we sleep better at night than during the day, but light levels also affect the production of hormones which help to regulate our activity. Small wonder that people who work the night shift more frequently suffer from depression, delusions, and self-inflicted harm. While some might argue that this is irrelevant to 'numbers on a dial', think about why everyplace had "local noon" prior to time zones. True, it was integral to early timekeeping devices such as solar calendars (I know of a fairly large such site in southeastern Colorado, of all places, filled with Ogam) but it is also integral to our daily function. Noon is noon - go ANYWHERE in the world and noon is approximately the middle of the day. Even if you're accustomed to US Mountain Time and go to Brisbane Australia (been there, done that), 6AM is when people are generally getting up to go to work; noon is roughly when everyone is having lunch; 6PM is dinnertime; etc. If anything, the current system of time zones **IS** "everyone working from the same clock" because virtually every aspect of human activity is controlled by the sun's position relative to our position upon the Earth. To add a further note to the involvement of railroads: The issue was never with hours but with minutes, which varied from community to community. If a westbound train reached a certain point at 11:13 by one clock and an eastbound train reached the same point at 11:08 by a clock which was five minutes behind (quite likely, as solar noon occurs earlier to the east and later to the west) you've got a disaster on your hands. This was an acceptable compromise because (with few exceptions) there was no point anywhere in the world more than 30 minutes ahead of or behind solar time - a very minor skew back when most people were far more perceptive of solar time than today. The need for such accuracy to avoid railroad mishaps was a key influence in promoting accurate timepieces. Engineers were required to carry an approved pocketwatch at all times, and said watch was required to be recertified every fifteen days - the watch could not lose or gain more than three seconds per day, had to do so in all weather conditions, regardless of how tightly the spring was wound or what position the watch was kept in. Station clocks were kept synchronized via telegraph and train operators (including conductors) synchronized their watches at every station before departure; again, not due to hours but because minutes or even seconds of inaccuracy could result in costly losses of lives and equipment.
@ThomasAlex
@ThomasAlex 2 жыл бұрын
I disagree. While things like Day light savings are unnecessary, timezones itself are definitely something that's necessary. If we all had a universal time, the numbers wouldn't mean anything and I will have no idea if say my friend in the other part of the world is sleeping, working, etc without doing some mental calculation. And it would vary between all places A lot of our activities are planned around the position of our sun. So it makes sense we have time that corresponds to the sun's position. We are after all diernal creatures as well, So having 12AM to 6AM as the local time when most people sleep is a very useful social construct we have
@pfzht
@pfzht 2 жыл бұрын
Daylight savings is important to the people who grow the food, even if the people who only consume it can't grasp its importance.
@ThomasAlex
@ThomasAlex 2 жыл бұрын
@@pfzht how does it change anything? Dont the farmers know that days are longer during summers and shorter during winters? Turning back or forward time is just done for the sake of matching up the sun's position and the clock. What tangible benefits does this offer that makes it worth all the annoyance for the locals as well as the international people who would probably just get confused by the changing time?
@pfzht
@pfzht 2 жыл бұрын
@@ThomasAlex Simple: Rest Human patterns matter. Also, the current system is not broken so there's no need to try to fix it, especially with "global time" nonsense that isn't in any way intuitive or related to human rhythms...it's just some arbitrary unnecessary layer of complexity, that nobody would have any reason to adopt, created by people with no real applications for the labyrinth they have built themselves. Like splitting hairs over the minutiae in any setting, it amounts to a whole lot of impractical annoyance so some doofus can play the authority. Let "well actually," in a smarmy voice, be their anthem.
@ThomasAlex
@ThomasAlex 2 жыл бұрын
@@pfzht umm did you read my orginal comment? I did say that timezone matter. I just said day light savings which is turning back clock 1 hour front and back is useless. We don't need to microadjust clocks to fully correspond with day and night
@pfzht
@pfzht 2 жыл бұрын
@@ThomasAlex Did you not read my reply? Is this really going to devolve into strawmen and red herrings?
@Nimish204
@Nimish204 2 жыл бұрын
I think the main argument against abolishing time zones is that the numbers of time lose all their value. Like if I travel to New York from India and someone told me it's 2:00pm that number now conveys no helpful information. I would still need to know what 'time' it is. If it's dark, and someone tells me it's 7:00pm that number doesn't help me at all. I still need to know whether I can expect public transportation to be available or restaurants to be open. I still need to know whether I should go to bed now, or a few hours later. Travelling would become really confusing if you got rid of time zones altogether.
@joedellinger9437
@joedellinger9437 2 жыл бұрын
In Asimov’s books, in the future everyone on Earth lives in domed cities and the whole planet is on the same time zone… because they never go outside and don’t care about the sun.
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting 🤔👍
@randymack2222
@randymack2222 2 жыл бұрын
Michigan is very close to Minnesota, but here we have two seasons Winter, and Road repair !!! Oh another thing, Daylight savings time... Like totally blows!
@timothyfrisch3707
@timothyfrisch3707 2 жыл бұрын
I vote in favor of keeping time zones. They help us communicate our relative experience of the day or night. So if you were to talk about something that happened to you at a certain time, it is easier for people to understand it if there are time zones. "I had lunch at noon the other day." Was it light or dark? You would always have to qualify where you were when something happened.
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
So your argument in favor of time zones is that getting rid of them would affect "small talk"?
@timothyfrisch3707
@timothyfrisch3707 2 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceAsylum Yes, and relating stories in written communication, like books, where the author gives a time that something took place.
@ScienceAsylum
@ScienceAsylum 2 жыл бұрын
@@timothyfrisch3707 Gotcha. Ok.
@timothyfrisch3707
@timothyfrisch3707 2 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceAsylum By the way, is this Nick Lucid commenting or one of the clones? 😂
@AvoniasStratigis
@AvoniasStratigis 2 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceAsylum Does that comment assume 'small talk' is somehow objectively an invalid argument?
@ollllj
@ollllj 2 жыл бұрын
Summer+winter time are obsolete and deadly, as sleepy drivers/pilots cause more accidents. Time zones of synchronized clocks, independent from seasons, are necessary to synchronize large scale plans, like train networks and modern traffic, since the longitude problem got solved by improved clocks to even measure time zones.
@amish613
@amish613 2 жыл бұрын
True
@txorimorea3869
@txorimorea3869 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly, there is no reason to keep that obsolete system beyond sadism towards workers.
2 жыл бұрын
If I understand correctly, the idea is to get rid of calculations. I'm not sure it'd actually help that much - you still need to check if Earths position and angle is reasonable at person you're coordinating with, which is practically same computation. I personally solved the sleep schedule issue by ignoring stupid timezone laws and not using alarm clock. I wake up when I wake up. 🙂
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