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The Pros and Cons (or costs) around Daylight Saving Time changes

Yesterday, the Detroit Free Press presented two views on the changes to the schedule on daylight saving time in 2007: one that it saves energy and another that it doesn’t.  These read like a Point-Counterpoint discussion on ABC News, and my unscientific review of articles yesterday points to a majority of opinion that DST doesn’t save much if any energy or money.  In fact, it looks like it increases costs for businesses and headaches for IT Pros and systems administrators.

[Note: I wrote this article on Sunday after verifying that in fact the world continued to spin on its axis after the clocks all moved forward in the US and Canada.  Just posting it now prior to heading off to a working lunch meeting in a different building on campus.] 

The first is an article is by U.S. Representative Fred Upton (R-St. Joseph), who represents Michigan’s 6th Congressional District (http://www.house.gov/upton).  Along with Ed Markey (D-Mass.), representative Upton was one of the two authors of the extension to daylight saving time (which varies with calendars rather than a standard four week extension as Upton describes) in the US Department of Energy’s Energy Policy Act of 2005

“We based the extension on sound science — closely examining the Department of the Navy’s sun tables to determine that a four-week extension would maximize our nation’s energy savings.

“Fast forward to today. The American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy estimates that the cumulative benefit of the four-week extension through 2020 will be a saving of approximately $4.4 billion and a reduction of carbon emissions by 10.8 million metric tons, cutting harmful greenhouse gases.

“Not only is extending daylight saving time an issue of conservation, it is also one of safety. Studies by a leading auto safety group have shown that extending daylight saving will save dozens of lives on our nation’s roads each year. Most accidents occur at dusk, but with the extended DST, our kids will have returned home from school and many folks will have completed their evening commute by sundown.”

The Free Press editorial, “Extended daylight saving time should be reset — it doesn’t save energy”rebuts that the first year with the new DST rules doesn’t save energy… but brings additional headaches…

“What it will do, for the next month or so, is keep sending kids out in the dark to wait for the school bus, make them less alert for the first hour of class and, as evening daylight keeps getting longer, less inclined to come inside to do homework or study.

“Farmers don’t like it much, nor do early morning exercisers and all those people who never seem to really wake up until daylight is coming in through the windows. The later switch in the fall also means little trick-or-treaters miss the fun of setting out on Halloween in the dark.”

Speaking of rug rats in search of sugary treats (we have two at home)… as I mentioned in “What do candy, Microsoft products and Congress have in common?” the change was of potential interest to one industry in particular: candy manufacturers, who reportedly lobbied for an extension to DST: this sunny extension will allow trick-or-treaters to scream “trick-or-treat” and collect candy for an additional hour.

Last fall, I saw a reference to a preliminary study for the California Energy Commission that showed savings during peak hours of 3.4 percent in March and 2.8 percent in November in 2007.  But again that seems to be a minority view: as I noted in a post last week, more recent analysis of the changes in Indiana concluded that DST doesn’t necessarily save energy (as noted here on NPR radio’s site).  The study in the report found that overall, Indiana households spent on average about $3.73 per household per year more on energy due to daylight saving time:…

“Against intuition and contrary to the entire point of government policy, the study found that daylight saving time resulted in an $8.6 million increase in spending on residential electricity.”

Also, I have not seen any follow up from the Dept. of Energy (DOE): as you may recall, in the Energy Policy Act of 2005, Congress retained the right to revert daylight saving time to its previous schedule as soon as the DOE had completed its assessment of the change in 2007.  I have only read passing commentary from the DOE, such as that noted in this link...

“Megan Barnett, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Energy, said the jury still is out on the exact savings nationwide of extending DST.  “We did a preliminary analysis, based on decades-old information, that indicates a very small, or fractional amount, of energy savings,” she said.

My personal suggestion? 

Leave the 2007 DST change as it is.  Live with the new DST rules in the US and Canada. Don’t flip-flop with calendar changes. 

Or if you’re going to make a move to the entry and exit dates on DST, just make one final move and leave it at that.

Countries should closely consider the other incremental costs associated with such changes — in addition to the potential for energy savings — lest they discover after the fact that a “simple time zone change” or “small modified entry/exit date to their observance of DST” impacts more broad than within their own boarders.  Apparently Venezuela had that experience and found that making a sudden change so quickly or with little impact to industry is difficult, having delayed the move to a new time zone not once but six or seven times by my count. 

And if you are going to make a change, ensure that the DOE, Congress — or some government agency (including the venerable DOE, where the change originated before being signed into law) — advertises and promotes the change well in advance as we have seen with the transition to digital TV in the States.

None of this accounts for the changes consumers and professionals must make in their homes and in their businesses. In the technology industry, these changes are cause for many impacts in several areas, from updating computers and business systems to adjusting clocks and devices that are not able to keep up with these changes.

More on how we’re dealing with these changes later this week.  Now, on to lunch.

Tags: Microsoft, Indiana, Matthew Kotchen, Daylight Saving Time, Daylight Savings Time, RSS,DST. 3,530,000; 6,950,000; 649,000+

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What I’ve read this week or so (through 030808)

Welcome to another installment of the reading pile, a collection of things on the web (and a few references to the hardcopy items with online versions). 

The past week — as always — has been a busy one, with changes to DST in Chile, the revelation that Daylight Saving Time costs people money, Steve Ballmer’s interview at Mix08, Mary Jo’s post on DST and that we ‘spring forward’ here in most of the States tomorrow

Add to all that offsites, onsite meetings, reviews, presentations… you get the idea.

Hulu: Great Product, Still Screwed – Silicon Alley Insider — Henry Blodget writes today (March 8, 2008) that “Hulu-the-company is still in a tough spot. Why? In short: it’s still too dependent on a handful of content partners, it bears most of the costs of streaming videos…

To Do: Long, Mysterious Interviews With Tech Bigshots – Silicon Alley Insider — “The good folks at Bloomberg Radio want us to know that host Tom Keene has interviewed Wired’s Chris “Long Tail” Anderson and Craigslist’s Jim “Not Craig” Buckmaster, and that you can hear the talks here. Duly noted.”

iPhone Smackdown: Apple vs. RIM, Lacy vs. Knobs: Tech Ticker, Yahoo! Finance — Aaron Task and Henry Blodget discuss the implications for devs and exciting new enterprise features” for the iPhone. Sarah Lacy butts in on the conversation with some hardcore West Coast perspective.

ATI RADEON HD 3450 — Info on the SAPPHIRE HD3450 which “is Microsoft VISTA™ compatible with awesome power of 40 stream processing units, accelerates next generation DirectX® 10 games while remaining best in its price vs. performance class.”  Also see this info on the SAPPHIRE 100235L Radeon HD 3470 at Newegg.com, the 256MB 64-bit GDDR3 PCI Express 2.0 x16 HDCP Ready CrossFire Supported Video Card

Study Finds 43 Million American Households Now Have Broadband Internet Access — An old study I dug up that notes that “forty-three million U.S. households now have broadband Internet access compared to just two million in 1999, according to the results of a new Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) research study on broadband access in America.”

Even in HD, Apple TV’s picture is a little fuzzy (Seattle Times Newspaper) — By Glenn Fleishman, Special to The Seattle Times — “But I confess I’m not overwhelmed by Apple TV’s latest revision, even though it has a host of entertaining features. Certainly, some lack of enthusiasm comes from the Hollywood-mandated 24 hours…”

How to Prevent Identity Theft — Deter, Detect, Defend (Get Rich Slowly) — Get Rich Slowly notes that “Identity theft is a real and growing concern. Your best defense is to prepare before it happens. According to one study conducted for the FTC [PDF], in 2005, 3.7% of the U.S. adult population were victims of identity theft.” … saved by 67 other people

Price Drop Alerts by Price!pinx web service (Red Ferret) – Thanks to LifeHacker and redferret.net, I have a new service that is a simple way to get email alerts on product price drops. Just browse to a product detail page, highlight the price and click the pinx bookmarklet button… saved by 203 other people

Have podcasts delivered directly to your email (geeksaresexy) – Mark O’Neill on geeksaresexy.net found that it’s possible for podcasts to be delivered directly to email. “I found out that it actually is (to a point) using a service called either ZapTXT or RSSFwd.”… saved by 18 other people

Get Ahead on LinkedIn – Wired How-To Wiki — For a primer on LinkedIn etiquette, Wired magazine consulted Jason Alba, author of I’m On Linked In — Now What? and CEO of Jibberjobber, as well as business etiquette expert Rachel C. Weingarten author of Career and Corporate Cool… saved by 215 other people

MSConfig Cleanup – optimize your Windows startup — MSConfig Cleanup does one thing that you might only need once, but it does it well. When you run “msconfig,” also known as Windows’ System Configuration tool, or a number of other optimizing programs, you have the option of disabling startup items… saved by 228 other people

Book Excerpt: CrazyBusy Argues Modern Life Inhibits Creativity — Lifehacker says that in his book, CrazyBusy, ADD expert Dr. Edward Hallowell says “that Crackberry culture leads to ADD-like symptoms in people that don’t officially have the disorder—a problem he calls Attention Deficit Trait (ADT).”… saved by 25 other people

Lifehacker Top 10: Top 10 Ways to Get Cables Under Control — “Whether you’re looking to stow your headphone wires tangle-free in your gym bag, hide the ugly wire spaghetti you keep kicking further under your desk, or organize your gadget chargers and power plugs, we’ve got some cord management tricks for you.”… saved by 629 other people

Humans Crawling With Microbes?! That’s Not All Bad (wired) — I know… high ‘ick’ factor, but interesting for kids.  “Your body is a wonderland — for bacteria, viruses, and fungi. Trillions of tiny organisms live on our skin and in our mouths and guts.” By Greta Lorge 02.25.08

Clive Thompson on How DIYers Just Might Revive American Innovation (Wired) — Clive Thompson laments that in America, “we’ve lost our Everyman ability to build, maintain, and repair the devices we rely on every day. And that’s making it harder to solve the country’s nastiest problems, like oil dependence, climate change… saved by 80 other people

10 Exercises for Better Focus and Concentration (egodevelopment.com) — Lifehacker said that this article outlines ways in which you can “vastly improve your concentration skills. Exercising your mind takes time and commitment but will ultimately translate to a sharper focus.”… saved by 583 other people

Thinkmap Visual Thesaurus websitesaved by 4207 other people

Tips for savvy medical Web surfing – CNN.com –Elizabeth Cohen of CNN asks “if you’re trying to find medical information for yourself or someone you love, and you’re not lucky enough to have access to a professional research librarian, what do you do?”… saved by 281 other people

Rebel with a Stalled Cause (businessweek) –Frustrated by the maddening state of call-center phone trees, the serial entrepreneur began harnessing the power of the Web in 2005 when he posted shortcuts to live people at call centers on his personal Web log. February 21, 2008, by Jena McGregor

Web Buyer’s Guide: Information about products, companies and whitepapers. — IBM, Novell and Intel have partnered to introduce a comprehensive virtualization solution. Registration required.

Canon HV30 Reviews – HDV – Camcorders – Cameras – Technology Reviews – washingtonpost.com — The Canon HV30 replaces one of the most popular camcorders in recent memory, the Canon HV20. Winner of multiple awards, the HV20 wowed critics with outstanding video quality and a great set of manual controls… and the HV30 offers a few simple upgrades…

Microsoft e-mails reveal Intel pressure over Vista | One More Thing – CNET News.com reports that “As far back as 2005, Microsoft executives knew that confusing hardware requirements for the Windows Vista Capable program might get them in trouble.”

Apple shareholders pepper Jobs with questions (CNET News) — March 4, 2008 — Apple CEO Steve Jobs fielded several wide-ranging questions from Apple shareholders Tuesday at the company’s annual meeting, covering ground from the iPhone to the plans for a post-Jobs Apple. Posted by Tom Krazit

Life Without Google | Between the Lines | ZDNet.com — Ask.com in the last year or so had been a nice little Petri dish. It launched AskCity, tinkered with its interface, created universal search results and became a credible alternative to Google. The problem: Ask.com couldn’t grow its base of users.

3G iPhone by June ’08 says analyst, but we’re not so sure (ars technica Infinite Loop) — By David Chartier, March 05, 2008 — “Man, it must be tough being Apple’s engineers and NAND flash buyers. You do all that work to crank out 16GB iPhones and 32GB iPod touches, but all analysts can do is keep barking for 3G iPhones.

Toshiba’s Plan for Life After HD DVD – WSJ.com — Nishida Says Firm Will Target Consumers With TVs, PCs and Standard Disc Players By YUKARI IWATANI KANE, March 3, 2008; Page B1

Microsoft Changes Its Tune (To The Tune of $1.3 Billion) – IndustryWeek Forums — Brad Kenney, IT Editor, IndustryWeek, 2/28/2008, 01:12 PM

Expensive laptops provide better quality, design (edmonton journal) — If you’re willing to pay the price, you’ll get sharper screens, more durability, reports Steve Makris

Pushing for quality and pushing himself | Freep.com | Detroit Free Press — Ford VP relies on focus and faith for success BY SARAH A. WEBSTER — Bennie Fowler, vice president for global quality at Ford Motor Co. since March 2007… [rose] from humble beginnings in Georgia, where he sold eggs door-to-door as a kid, to one of Ford’

Revisiting the Inquisition | Newsweek Religion | Newsweek.com — Now, after centuries of secrecy on the subject, the Vatican has launched a new phase in its campaign to show that the Inquisition wasn’t so bad after all. Church authorities have unveiled a temporary “Rare and Precious” exhibition…

MyNetflix Software for Windows Vista Media Center (Anthony Park) — MyNetflix is a plugin for Microsoft Windows Media Center which allows you use your Netflix subscription with a remote control. Microsoft Windows Vista with Media Center is required to use this software… saved by 38 other people

BookletCreator – create a booklet from any PDF document — BookletCreator is a free (but public, not secure) PDF conversion webapp that creates documents that can be printed and folded into an easy-to-read booklet… saved by 1268 other people

David Allen Part 3: Really Getting it Done is Not Just Lists (Web Worker Daily) — Weblog Web Worker Daily has an interview with Getting Things Done author David Allen… saved by 139 other people

In Defense Of Complaining — Cory Doctorow — InformationWeek — “Companies aren’t charities. They’re businesses. It doesn’t matter why they’re offering an unacceptable product — all that matters is that the product is unacceptable. Companies aren’t five-year-olds bringing their fingerpaintings home from kindergarten.

Air Travel with Kids and Pets – How to Keep Your Sanity — Air travel is challenging under the best of circumstances, and DLM has tips on how can you be best prepared for this adventure with kids. Here are some tips to help you survive and hopefully enjoy your travel day too… saved by 40 other people

Wii Browser Portal « Wii Browser — Want to create an easy-to-navigate home page for the broswer on your Wii or any other? Wii Browser, a free page creation tool, lets you create a page full of big, easy-to-click links to set as your homepage… saved by 55 other people

WiebeTech USB DriveDock v4 – Hard Drive Docking Station — USB DriveDock connects via USB2 to your computer, allowing you to access the drive and contents. The USB DriveDock has two options for power input: the included AC adapter or a 4-wire connector from the computer’s power supply, if it’s more handy.

Windows Server 2008 Launch: Ninjas Black and Blue (Microsoft Watch) — February 28, 2008 — Joe Wilcox said that “Repeatedly I asked myself yesterday: Is Microsoft making the same marketing mistakes with its new server software as Windows Vista?”

Jimmy Wales of Wikipedia on “radical transparency” (OPEN Forum Video Event Center) — Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales explains how “radical transparency” works and why your customers will respect you for it. With Seth Godin… saved by 13 other people

The Truth About Autism: Scientists Reconsider What They Think They Know (Wired) — Like many people with autism, Baggs doesn’t like to look you in the eye and needs help with tasks like preparing a meal and taking a shower. In conversation she’ll occasionally grunt or sigh, but she stopped speaking altogether in her early twenties… saved by 200 other people

In Defense Of Complaining — Cory Doctorow — InformationWeek — Complain about a company, and you’ll be accused of being a whiner. But markets thrive on information, so it’s every customer’s right to complain, and every company’s obligation to shut up and listen, says columnist Cory Doctorow. By Cory Doctorow… saved by 10 other people

Video Demonstration: Touch Up Your Pics in Photoshop — Funny-man Photoshopper Donnie Hoyle introduces how to use two Photoshop tools—the spot healing brush tool and the patch tool—to touch up photos and smooth out features… saved by 42 other people

Blog Recommendation Startup Outbrain Raises $5 Million (techcrunch) — Funding Monday continues. NY/Israeli startup Outbrain is announcing a $5 million series A financing, led by Gemini Israeli Funds and Lightspeed Venture Partners. Outbrain is creating a ratings and recommendation platform for blogs and news feeds… saved by 14 other people

Ask The Readers: Handling More Than 12 Hours on a Plane? (lifehacker) — lifehacker asks: “If you have any suggestions for making half a day on an airplane bearable, let us know in the comments (and she’ll stop talking about herself in the third person and shamelessly using you for her own purposes).”

Feature: Use Your Wii as a Media Center (lifehacker) — “Luckily, using the Opera browser, you can turn your Wii into a full-fledged media center with the freeware Windows application Orb. Here’s how.”… saved by 37 other people

8+ Ways To Train Yourself To Be Creative (eventurebiz) — “But how do you train your mind to become a well-oiled creative thinking machine? Like the first sentence of this post says, you have to first believe you are a creative person. Following that you need to exercise your mind in various ways… saved by 432 other people

How to Manage Overachievers on BNET — “Here we’ll show you how to curb the destructive tendencies that can disrupt a star performer’s productivity and develop positive management skills to keep them — and you — happy.”… saved by 195 other people

Phone: Track Down Whoever Keeps Calling with 800Notes — 800Notes, a free user-submitted reverse phone directory, lets you see who might be ringing, whether it’s a sales firm, debt collection agency, or other cloaked caller. Whether or not you find a match depends on if anybody else has reported the identity… saved by 336 other people

Credit Reports: Know Where To Fix Your Credit Score By Getting Your Reason Codes (consumerist) — “If you want to improve your credit score, a score from 300-850 that lenders use to determine whether you qualify for a loan and how much interest to charge you if you do, you’ll want to know your “reason codes.”… saved by 47 other people

Manage Your Online Reputation (lifehacker) — “Two years ago we covered how to have a say in what Google says about you, and more recently, and how to track down anyone online. But a rash of social media sites have arisen that give you more tools to help you manage your online reputation… saved by 377 other people

On why I am not running [for congress] (Lessig Blog) — Feb 25, 2008 — “With lots of mixed feelings, I have decided a run for Congress would not help the Change Congress movement. I explain the thinking in this 5 minute video (a new record for me!).

F.C.C. to Act on Delaying of Broadband Traffic – New York Times — By STEPHEN LABATON, February 25, 2008 — The head of the Federal Communications Commission and other senior officials said on Monday that they were considering taking steps to discourage cable and telephone companies from discriminating against content…

FORTUNE: Techland Yang breaks silence on Microsoft takeover — In their first public appearance since Microsoft’s hostile $44.6 billion bid for Yahoo, Yang and Yahoo (YHOO) president Susan Decker each gave a 15-minute speech about Yahoo’s online ad strategy to a crowd of 400 industry players… saved by 8 other people

Maybe Microsoft Should Stalk Different Prey – New York Times — Feb 24, 2008 — “If Microsoft thinks this is the right time to try a major acquisition on a scale it has never tried before, it should not pursue Yahoo. Rather, it should acquire another major player in business software

Digital downloads will be Blu-ray’s downfall (Tech news blog – CNET News.com)  Posted by Erica Ogg — With the fall of HD DVD, Blu-ray has assumed the throne as the next format of choice, but its reign will be short-lived. Blu-ray won’t enjoy the same decade-long dominance DVD did after it succeeded VHS… saved by 11 other people

This Is the Modding World (Real Time – WSJ.com)  Software Updates Have Changed Products, As Well As What We Expect From Them February 25, 2008, by Jason Fry.

Limited Edition! Limited Edition! (in Japan) – WSJ.com — Record labels have regularly been offering first-edition albums. Most include a special DVD or a set of photos of the artist. The “available-now-only” gimmicks not only satisfy a Japanese craze for new products…

Here’s how to get a 4-star hotel at a low-star price – USATODAY.com — “How did you get that price?” she asked, noting that the $75 per-night tab for my ocean-view room was about 60% off the best Hilton .com rate and even lower than the kamaaina (locals-only) discount. My secret: Priceline.com… saved by 8 other people

FCC to Adjust Plan for Digital-TV Ads (Wall Street Journal) — February 22, 2008 By AMY SCHATZ, Page B3 — Federal regulators are backing away from a plan that would have required television stations to air as many as a dozen public-service ads a day about the U.S.’s transition to digital television next year.

In the land of women (Fortune) — Lots of companies fret about keeping women in the workforce. Principal Financial has figured out how to do it. Jessi Hempel, Jan. 22, 2008

Top 50 employers (Fortune’s 100 best companies in 2008) — We surveyed nearly 100,000 employees from 406 different companies and asked them to evaluate their employers. These firms ranked the highest. By Robert Levering and Milton Moskowitz

Sidney Harman: Old hand in a strange new world (Fortune) — In the heat of the private equity boom, the octogenarian audio pioneer Sidney Harman agreed to sell his company to KKR and Goldman Sachs. Then they ditched him. Now he has a stock worth one-third of what it was. A tale from the dark side. By Carol J. Loom

What Iraq will cost the U.S. (Fortune) — Former White House economist Lawrence Lindsey ignited a furor with his estimate of the dollar cost of the Iraq war. For the first time, he tells how he came up with the number and what he thinks now. By Lawrence B. Lindsey, Jan. 11, 2008… saved by 3 other people

MY M&M’S Custom M&Ms — Order MY M&M’S® Custom Message or Color today, get delivery within a couple of weeks… saved by 127 other people

Online Contents – Forbes.com  – Online Contents by Forbes.com staff

A Line in the Dust – Forbes.com — by Daniel Fisher, January 07, 2008 — Asbestos lawyers have had their way with bankrupt companies so far. W.R. Grace hopes to change all that.

Shoot Yourself in the Foot – Forbes.com — by Andrew Bender, January 07, 2008 — A new retailer out of Finland uses cameras and the Web to produce custom shoes for the price of off-the-shelf.

A Genius at Tutoring – Forbes.com — Public schools don’t have the time to teach writing. Author Dave Eggers is making up for that, with a little quirky humor thrown in. Claire Cain Miller 01.07.08

Andy Grove’s Last Stand (Forbes) — By Kerry A. Dolan 01.28.08 — The former Intel chief, now battling Parkinson’s, is on a crusade to speed progress in treating the disease. Can he make a difference?

Arts and Crafts Find New Life Online (BusinessWeek) — Web sites are building communities—and businesses—on the growing do-it-yourself craze by Heather Green, Jan 3, 2008… saved by 5 other people

The Top 10 Web Sites You’ve Never Heard Of (MSN Tech & Gadgets) — FastCompany.com has culled the most useful and entertaining sites from the far reaches of the Web so that when these sites go mainstream, you’ll be one step ahead of the crowd… saved by 133 other people

Sony’s $400 Million Hit Man (Digital Daily, AllThingsD) — The next-generation DVD format war was a costly one–for Sony. In addition to the untold funds the company spent on pro-Blu-ray propaganda, it also reportedly spent quite a bit to buy the allegiances of Hollywood. by John Paczkowski, February 22, 2008

Stringer makes his mark (on Blu-Ray vs HD DVD) (globeandmail.com) — Feb 20, 2008 – “Sony’s CEO led his company to victory in the high-definition sweepstakes by convincing the major studios to come aboard. What remains a mystery is just how big a push Warner needed to pick sides.

Microsoft’s newest keyboard, mouse are fancy, but not worth $300 (Seattle Times) — Mike Himowitz of the Baltimore Sun has a “Reality check — $260 for a keyboard and mouse? That’s almost four times as much as I spent for the wireless combo I use with the computer that’s hooked up to our HDTV set.

PBS series features local business whiz kids (Seattle Times Living) — a new nationwide public-TV series spotlights this sort of inventiveness by the MySpace/millennial generations. Called “Biz Kid$” and produced by the same Seattle-based team behind the Emmy-winning “Bill Nye The Science Guy.”

A Roman show of strength (Seattle Times The Arts) — “Roman Art from the Louvre” — a traveling show of some 180 objects from the legendary Paris museum — will open Thursday at Seattle Art Museum and fill the new 14,000-square-foot Special Exhibitions gallery with 50 tons of monumental statues…

Innovation at Risk (BusinessWeek) — Exaggerating design’s ability to drive new growth sets the stage for a backlash, especially during leaner times, by Lara Lee

A CEO Manning the Phones Each Day? (BusinessWeek) — What sounds like a customer-service gimmick is helping the co-founder of a personal finance Web site build trust, by John Tozzi… saved by 3 other people

Apple Shares Rolling Downhill (BusinessWeek) — Fearing recession, consumers rein in discretionary spending, and fewer iPods, iPhones, and Macs may be sold. Will Apple find its footing? by Arik Hesseldahl… saved by 4 other people

The Telltale Signs of Recession (BusinessWeek) — Feb 13, 2008 — Here are four indicators with good track records at predicting downturns. Watch them to see where the economy is likely to go next, by James Cooper

Jerry Yang’s Letter to Stockholders (BusinessWeek) — Feb 14, 2008 — “I wanted to reach out to you personally to let you know why your Board of Directors, after a careful review by Yahoo!’s management along with our financial and legal advisors, believes that Microsoft’s proposal substantially undervalues Yahoo!

Software You Shouldn’t Ever Notice (BusinessWeek) — Humanized co-founder Aza Raskin is carrying on the design legacy of his father, a Macintosh pioneer by Ryan Blitstein… saved by 9 other people

The IQ List: Smart Stocks with Potential (BusinessWeek) — Feb 15, 2008 — Here are top scorers under Standard & Poor’s “Investability Quotient” measure, which ranks stocks according to their potential for return by Beth Piskora From Standard & Poor’s Equity Research

Building the Perfect Laptop (BusinessWeek) — The Future of Tech February 14, 2008 — The superslim ThinkPad X300 is Lenovo’s bid for leadership in the high-stakes world of laptops… saved by 66 other people

Murdoch’s New Startup Incubator (BusinessWeek) — The SlingShot Labs venture is designed to spawn Internet startups for News Corp. and also likely to help MySpace compete with Facebook – Feb 13, 2008 by Aaron Ricadela… saved by 14 other people

BetaNews | Is Microsoft’s PlayReady ready to go yet?  By Tim Conneally, February 11, 2008, 6:42 PM Announced one year ago at 3GSM in Barcelona, PlayReady is Microsoft’s DRM solution for mobile content providers. Now one year later, more partners have announced planned deployments…but it has seen no rollout…

BetaNews | Apple TV update goes live with high-definition rentals  — By Nate Mook and Ed Oswald, February 12, 2008, 3:34 PM Apple silently pushed its promised update to customers with its Apple TV device on Tuesday.

BetaNews | Microsoft: ‘We misjudged demand’ for Xbox 360 — By Ed Oswald, BetaNews, February 14, 2008, 11:14 AM Microsoft admitted Wednesday that it sales for its flagship Xbox 360 game console were in fact so strong that it hasn’t been able to maintain inventory levels.

BetaNews | Could video-on-demand overtake HD discs by 2011?  By Jacqueline Emigh, February 14, 2008, 3:39 PM According to analysts, just three years from now, 129 million people worldwide will be subscribing to Direct-to-Home Video, most likely with high definition. Will HD optical drives plummet into a niche mark

BetaNews | EC commissioner proposes doubling terms of performers’ copyright  — By Scott M. Fulton, III, BetaNews, February 14, 2008, 5:34 PM “Oldies” music remains popular among many generations, which could present a window of opportunity for record companies in Europe to take advantage of royalties terms expiring after 50 years.

BetaNews | Comcast: 42% of digital subscribers use high-def, DV-R — [Note: This is the first time that I’ve seen thsi referred to as DV-R. ; ]  By Jacqueline Emigh, BetaNews February 14, 2008, 5:53 PM At CES 2008 last month, it was surprising to see Comcast as a brand being tossed around with the likes of Matsushita, Motorola, and Sony.

When Home is Where the Art Is: Hanging and Installation Tips for Collectors — When hanging works of art it is always best to hire a professional installer or free-lance conservator, who should not only have access to all the latest hardware and equipment, but should be able to offer advice for the safest placement of art in your home…

Anthony Park :: 100% Geek Content by Volume » New Vista Media Center Plugin – MyNetflix (beta) — Ooooh. This is JUST what I wanted: the ability to manage your Netflix Queue and stream Watch Now videos directly through Windows Media Center with freeware Media Center plug-in MyNetflix… saved by 109 other people

Best music editing program for Windows? | Ask MetaFilter — A consumer wanted a basic (but good) FREE music editing program that will let them upload audio and edit the files. Here are the comments from the community at MetaFilter… saved by 8 other people

Exclusive Lifehacker Download: DVD Rip Automates One-Click DVD Ripping — Rip and back up any DVD to your hard drive with DVD Rip, a freeware Windows application that automates the entire DVD-to-hard-drive backup process. All you need to do is insert your DVD, run DVD Rip, and let it take care of the rest… saved by 811 other people

Mortgage Prepayment Made Easy: Own Your Home in Half the Time (Get Rich Slowly) — Tips on making accelerated payments on your mortgage… saved by 213 other people

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Chile changes DST, and Daylight Saving Time costs Indiana $8.6M per year according to one study… as much as $400M across the US

Chile changes their DST dates to save energy, but one professor and grad student found that it costs rather than saves money in the US.

 

Once again, we have changes in South America, this time in the Republic of Chile, as noted here on the TZ and DST blog, Chile announces an extension on their Daylight Saving Time for 2008.

The government announced in February that their current observance of daylight saving time will be extended in order to save energy.

Interesting, especially with all the news this week that DST doesn’t necessarily save energy… particularly this report yesterday on NPR…  

“A study conducted in Indiana concluded that Daylight Saving Time uses more energy than it conserves. Matthew Kotchen, an economics professor who worked on the study, talks with Melissa Block about what researchers learned.” [Listen Now, 4 min 14 sec]

As noted in the New York Times here, Mr. Kotchen (an economics professor at UC Santa Barbara) along with Laura Grant (a doctoral student) took the time to leaf through 7,000,000 electric bills from customers in Indiana over the last three years. I heard in the interview on NPR that Kotchen and Grant found that overall, Hoosiers spent on average about $3.73 per household per year more on energy due to daylight saving time… that may not sound like much — just a gallon of gas at today’s rate, but taken across the state… 

“Against intuition and contrary to the entire point of government policy, the study found that daylight saving time resulted in an $8.6 million increase in spending on residential electricity.”

Whoops. 

Now, I’m no economist… but if you assume 2.3 million households in Indiana, on a national level in the States (from my back-of-the-envelope estimate) that’s $392.6 million dollar cost per year.  This assumes a straight line estimate based on the Indiana information (see this info on Indiana Population from 2002) across 105M households in the US (according to the Households and Families info in the 2000 US Census).  I’m sure that the actual number would vary based on energy consumption in different parts of the country at different times of the year.  

But nearly $400 million is a chunk of change… and that’s just for energy.

Back to Chile (pronounced cheel-ahy, rather than the pronunciation noted on dictionary.com)…

The new fall back date for the daylight saving period of 2007-2008 is:

Daylight saving time ends:  Last Saturday of March at 11:59:59PM

Information is available via our Chilean web site at http://www.microsoft.com/chile/cambiodehora, “Extension del horario de Verano en Chile”.  Customers and partners will find additional information on this change and manual remediation at http://blogs.technet.com/latam/archive/tags/DST/default.aspx

The default configuration for the time zone “(GMT-04:00) Santiago” in Windows Operating Systems does not reflect the new final date for the daylight saving time defined by the government.  This bulletin summarizes the actions recommended for customers in Chile to address the extension of daylight saving time and mitigate its impacts.

Tags: Microsoft, Indiana, Chile, Matthew Kotchen, Daylight Saving Time, Daylight Savings Time, RSS, DST. 3,530,000 (down a million items); 6,950,000; 649,000+

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Your questions: “How do I get updates to DST and time zone updates and alerts?”

Related to the regular updates made to our pages on time, Steven asked this week…



“Is there something that customer can plug into, like subscribing to monthly security alerts, for DST [and, I’ll add, time zone] updates?”


No, not directly. You can enable tracking for specific pages on the web (such as the the DST and time zone web pages) via RSS feed using free, third party services like page2rss, feedity, feedyes and other services.


I find that for updates to the pages linked off of http://www.microsoft.com/time — such as the Hot Topics and impacted Microsoft product list — services such as Feedity work well.


This approach also works for tracking the changes made to Knowledge Base (KB) articles, such as the December 2007 cumulative time zone update for Microsoft Windows operating systems (KB 942763).  As we update the article — particularly when the KB is superseded by a new update — you’ll get pinged.


As Sean noted (and reminded… thanks!) you may also want to leverage the RSS feed for the Technet/MS DST Blog at http://blogs.technet.com/dst2007.

You can also apply this to external, public resource sites such as those on the TimeandDate.com site…


… the tzdatabase page, the list of time zones wiki and the overall time zone Wiki page.

Tags: Microsoft, Daylight Saving Time, Daylight Savings Time, RSS, DST. 3,530,000 (down a million items); 6,950,000; 649,000+

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Turning up the volume… on blog comments

Last November, I noted that I turned down the spam comments on my blog, limiting the time to post comments.  Well, that strategy worked and I’ve decided to experiment by increasing the time to post comments, from seven days to 14.  We’ll see how that holds up over the next couple of weeks.