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Post by Thunder Good-Oil on Feb 21, 2016 12:33:28 GMT -5
"Standard" time starts in November and ends in March. Since DST lasts almost twice as long as standard time, why doesn't standard time run from March to November and then November to March is Daylight Losing Time?
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Post by gramps on Feb 21, 2016 22:17:41 GMT -5
Doesn't Indiana still observe ST all year round?
I'm a fan of DST. Like the extra hour of daylight at the end of the day better.
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Post by Thunder Good-Oil on Feb 21, 2016 23:28:41 GMT -5
Indiana started observing DST 10 years ago. Parts of some western states still don't.
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Post by gramps on Feb 21, 2016 23:53:51 GMT -5
Indiana started observing DST 10 years ago. Parts of some western states still don't. I sit corrected, then. Knew there were some states left that still didn't do DST.
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Post by relic on Mar 19, 2016 20:49:35 GMT -5
Indiana started observing DST 10 years ago. Parts of some western states still don't. I sit corrected, then. Knew there were some states left that still didn't do DST. I'd rather stand, most times. Correct or incorrect. Out of the 50 states, Arizona is the lone holdout, except for the Navajo nation, which does go by DST.
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Post by gramps on Mar 20, 2016 10:54:04 GMT -5
I sit corrected, then. Knew there were some states left that still didn't do DST. I'd rather stand, most times. Correct or incorrect. I do stand corrected when I am standing, but when I am sitting, as I was at the particular moment that I was posting, I sit corrected.
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Post by relic on Mar 20, 2016 12:11:31 GMT -5
Good one.
Precision in communication is a good thing.
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Post by gramps on Mar 20, 2016 12:33:45 GMT -5
Good one. Precision in communication is a good thing. Like El Rushbo is fond of saying, words mean things.
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