Why isn’t this a popular thing?

  • zlatiah@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    I believe no one else mentioned this but… China is a case study of why this is a terrible idea

    The entire PRC uses the same time zone, even though in any other parts of the world, China should have been split to at least 3 different timezones

    It is very disorienting to try and go for breakfast in Tibet at 9 am to find that nothing is open and the sun is just out… So yeah. Imagine if this is extended to 12-hr differences

    Wikipedia has a nice summary of this

  • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    Because that would be a nightmare. “I’ll meet you for lunch at 2AM”, “No, I had a huge breakfast yesterday”. You would need to relearn the times every time you went to a different place, “oh, right, the restaurants only serve lunch until 10AM” or “Sorry sir, but there’s an extra fee for night time services starting 1PM”. Those are much more likely day-to-day phrases than scheduling a meeting with someone from another continent. And you don’t gain anything by this, because whenever you’re communicating across timezones you can simply use UTC as a standard and everyone knows how to convert that to their own time. So there’s no good reason and a lot of drawbacks.

    • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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      16 days ago

      Only because we’re already familiar with the current way of doing things, though. If we had all been on UTC for our entire lives, it would be a simple matter of getting to a new place, asking when local noon is, and going about our business.

      “Hey, when is local noon here?”

      “'bout 0330.”

      “Cool, thanks. Want to get together for drinks tomorrow night? Say, around 1045?”

      They’re all just numbers. They have no inherent meaning, only what we imbue then with.

      It would get a little bit tricky with the date switching over in the middle of the day, of course. In my mind, that’s the biggest reason.

      • Dasus@lemmy.world
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        16 days ago

        Why exactly is asking for “what time is the local noon” more convenient than asking “what timezone is this”?

        How is “local noon is at 2:45” somehow easier to adjust to than “adjust your clock by X hours”? You don’t need to relearn every thing like what time breakfast is served when local noon is 08:50.

        • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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          16 days ago

          It’s not more convenient. I’m just saying we’d have been used to that and just as weirded out by the idea of time zones if that was all we’d ever known.

          • Dasus@lemmy.world
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            15 days ago

            No we wouldn’t.

            One of these is a logical thing, we measured time in the relative passing of days.

            Having “our local noon is 0550pm” is dumb as rocks and nowhere comparable to time zones. Unlike some people have prolly told you, not every idea is equal.

            Now go ahead and read what it’s doing in China and see our glorious idea at work

            • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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              15 days ago

              Having “our local noon is 0550pm” is dumb as rocks and nowhere comparable to time zones.

              How is “our local noon is at 1200” any more objectively logical? Midnight is an objectively arbitrary time to start the new date. The best you can say is that it’s twelve hours before local noon, but even if you index off of local noon it doesn’t make any more logical sense to put the 0 while most people are asleep. Someone who hasn’t grown up with our clock might well say, “why would we choose a clock that puts the beginning of the usable part of the day at 6 or 7 for most people?” Calling the hour when people wake up 0000 or 0100 would make a lot of logical sense.

              Unlike some people have prolly told you, not every idea is equal.

              Numbers have no inherent meaning. We could make noon happen at 0000, 1200, 2200, whatever–and people would find it completely intuitive if they grew up in it all their lives.

              I’m not saying that “every idea is equal.” That’s patently nonsense. What I’m saying is that, if you’re going to have a 24-hour clock indexed to noon, putting noon at 1200 makes just as much sense as putting it at any other time on that 24-hour clock.

              Now go ahead and read what it’s doing in China and see our glorious idea at work

              Sounds like the answer is “fine.” People in Xinjiang wake up a couple of hours late, start work at 1100, have lunch at 1400, and often watch the sun set at midnight. They continue to live there and continue to have a pretty normal life. The only weirdness comes from talking to people in other time zones, which again would not be a problem if everyone in the world had started with this from their youth.

              Again, I’m not trying to suggest that it’s better. I’m just saying that this arbitrary choice about how to handle time around the world is not any better or worse than any other arbitrary choice we could have made; it’s only because we know our current method so well that we think any other method is weird.

              • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                15 days ago

                You don’t know what “arbitrary” means…

                Noon or midnight aren’t arbitrary. They’re the exact opposite. Noon is the middle of the day. The exact middle point of one revolution of our planet (roughly, days aren’t actually exactly a day long but that’s too advanced for you lol).

                The exact middle of the day, recognisable to most people simply by looking up, is the exact opposite of arbitrary.

                Numbers have no inherent meaning

                Uh, yes they do. That’s why they’re called numbers. “2” means || that many things and “5” means ||||| means that many things. There’s literally an inherent meaning in them.

                There’s also actual reason as to why the day is divided the way it is, but seeing how proud you are of your overbearing ignorance, I’m not gonna educate you on what it is.

                Hours weren’t always the same length, it’d depend on the length of the time of day. Do you know what doesn’t change? Noon being in the middle of the day. Because we’re on a revolving piece of rock in space and no matter how much you stomp your foot and cry foul, noon will still always be non-arbitrary

                What you need is a fkin dictionary bruh

                Sounds like the answer is “fine.”

                Ah, some deeply meaningful willfull ignorance, because you can’t admit you backed a moronic idea.

                • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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                  15 days ago

                  Noon or midnight aren’t arbitrary.

                  I didn’t say they were. I said that the numbers we’ve attached to them are.

                  (roughly, days aren’t actually exactly a day long but that’s too advanced for you lol).

                  Strong words from someone who only reads three out of every five words.

                  The exact middle of the day, recognisable to most people simply by looking up, is the exact opposite of arbitrary.

                  Calling it the “middle of the day” is. It could very easily be the beginning of the day, or three-quarters of the way through the day. If you had lived with that your whole life, you would think it was normal.

                  There’s literally an inherent meaning in [numbers].

                  Not as they’re used in timekeeping. I’m sorry, I didn’t realize I needed to explain something so simple to you as “the words I use are meant to be interpreted in the context in which I’m using them.”

                  There’s also actual reason as to why the day is divided the way it is, but seeing how proud you are of your overbearing ignorance, I’m not gonna educate you on what it is.

                  That’s a lot of words to say “I don’t know but there’s probably a reason.”

                  The real reason is “because the ancient Egyptians arbitrarily decided to divide it into twelve hours.” As for indexing solar noon as 12:00, well, it actually didn’t always; in fact, the word “noon” comes from the Latin word for “nine.” The first hour of the day (when people woke up) was 1:00, roughly analogous to our 6am, and nine hours later (our 3pm) was “noon.” The reason it became solar noon was that they observed a sort of coordinated universal time! Noon drifted earlier in the day as the center of culture drifted.

                  Hours weren’t always the same length, it’d depend on the length of the time of day. Do you know what doesn’t change? Noon being in the middle of the day.

                  Sure it does. Other cultures make noon the beginning of the day, or make sunset the beginning of the day. Yes it changes the lengths of time periods. You only think it’s weird because you’ve always known a world where noon was the middle of the day.

                  Because we’re on a revolving piece of rock in space and no matter how much you stomp your foot and cry foul, noon will still always be non-arbitrary

                  True. But noon as equal to 1200 will always be arbitrary, because we’re on a rock in space and it didn’t come with any numbers on it.

                  Ah, some deeply meaningful willfull ignorance, because you can’t admit you backed a moronic idea.

                  Once again, I beg you to actually use some reading comprehension. I haven’t backed any ideas. But it’s easier to sling insults than to read carefully and come up with a cogent response.

      • linearchaos@lemmy.world
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        16 days ago

        So every time you deal with somebody in a different location, you can’t assume anything about the hours and times you have to ask them or go look it up Even if you have a decent idea where they live because you’re not going to know the time disparity of every city out there.

        • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          16 days ago

          So… like it is already? Ever tried to call someone in a different time zone? It’s fine-ish 1 or maybe 2 hours off, but much beyond that still requires a minimum of research.

          • Dasus@lemmy.world
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            16 days ago

            Your ring up a person, they go “why the fuck are you calling me at 09:45?”, sounding really upset. You don’t understand why. He’s in a place where that means it’s the middle of the night and as a local he understands it.

            Oooor

            He could just say “do you know what time it is here? It’s two am!” and you’d understand.

            • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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              16 days ago

              No, in this hypothetical scenario, he wouldn’t complain about it being 0945 because he’s grown up in a world where that’s ambiguous. He’s going to say, “Don’t you know it’s the middle of the night here?!”

              • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                15 days ago

                because he’s grown up in a world where that’s ambiguous

                No he hasn’t. Never moved a or traveled outside his own city.

                That why this “make everyones time the same” is about as smart as an idea as shoving Lego up your nose.

                • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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                  15 days ago

                  Are you suggesting that this is a world without the internet or international television programs? He’s going to know that hours are different everywhere, especially if he has friends in other regions.

                  That why this “make everyones time the same” is about as smart as an idea as shoving Lego up your nose.

                  Only because the current way is the one you know. In this alternate universe where the whole world has always been on UTC and someone posted a question on Lemmy asking why the whole planet isn’t divided up into 1-hour offsets with their own times, that universe’s version of you would be just as irrationally angry with that universe’s version of me for daring to suggest that the time zone idea is no less irrational than the UTC idea.

    • growsomethinggood ()@reddthat.com
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      17 days ago

      And you’d still have to adjust to local time anyway! Travel three timezones and now noon is at 9 instead of 12. Your alarm to wake up at 6, now needs to be at 3.

        • growsomethinggood ()@reddthat.com
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          17 days ago

          Sunrise at 06:00 UTC in one timezone would occur at 03:00 UTC three timezones over, I mean. The relationship between standard time and local, solar noon based time (sunrise, noon, sunset, midnight) is going to have a flexing relationship across different places on Earth. So if you’re travelling or even communicating across timezones, you haven’t fixed anything by using UTC since daily activities (sleep, meals, etc.) are still correlated to when the sun is up or not. Timezones communicates that daily relationship with time pretty effectively without having to do a lot of thought about it all the time.

          • Baron Von J@lemmy.world
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            17 days ago

            Sunrise at 06:00 UTC in one timezone would occur at 03:00 UTC three timezones over

            Right, but I wouldn’t want to keep my daily routine aligned to a different time zone than where I am.

            So if you’re travelling or even communicating across timezones, you haven’t fixed anything by using UTC since daily activities (sleep, meals, etc.) are still correlated to when the sun is up or not

            Exactly. So why would I want to adjust my alarm to 3am after travelling 3 time zones? I only care about relating the time between two zones for real-time communication with people in the other zone. And I’m not getting up at 3am for them.

            • growsomethinggood ()@reddthat.com
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              17 days ago

              I don’t understand what you’re asking here. I’m saying if you kept UTC in every place on earth, you’d still have to relate those hours to a solar based local time. If you wake up at 6UTC in London and then travel to Moscow, the sun in Moscow would rise 3 hours earlier (guessing, not sure exactly what time time difference is). So if Moscow was also keeping UTC, they would set their alarms for 3UTC to wake up with the sun. If you travel to Moscow, you’d wake up at 3UTC with the sun, which is the equivalent of 3am London time, but is around sunrise locally. This is just how time zones work, so I have no idea where the confusion is.