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IT Pro Magazine article on daylight saving time available online

A reader sent a comment (thanks, Mike) that he was “glad to see this (DST 2007) is getting press.”


This reminded me: in case you missed it… the Jan./Feb. 2007 issues of IT Pro magazine has the article “Are You Prepared for Daylight Saving Time 2007?” It was written by our own Stephen Tong and Joseph Williams, and is available at…


http://www.computer.org/portal/site/itpro/menuitem.1be818ec0dbc9388a84840898bcd45f3/index.jsp?&pName=itpro_level1&path=itpro/content&file=Daylight_Saving_Time_2007.xml&xsl=article.xsl.  


It also has a very clear graphic describing the change in the US DST entry and exit dates (the dates are different for some other territories, such as European Summer Time which begins on March 25th):


Revised US DST 2007


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Got a Windws Mobile device with Outlook? Plan to get the upcoming daylight saving time fix

A special note to users of Microsoft Outlook on a Windows Mobile-based device: an update for Windows Mobile will be available on the Web by February 12, 2007. To download this update, visit the following Microsoft Web site on or after February 12, 2007: http://www.microsoft.com/windowsmobile/daylightsaving [link updated]



“If you do not update your Windows Mobile-based device, the clock on the device will be incorrect by one hour when daylight saving time (DST) changes occur. Specifically, calendar items will incorrect by one hour during the extended DST period. This period lasts for three weeks in March and for one week in November.”


And see http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx/kb/923953 for more details.


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Mary Jo Foley’s Daylight Saving Time Tips for Microsoft users

I had the pleasure of speaking today with ZDNet‘s Mary Jo Foley about the upcoming Daylight Saving Time change and her Tips for Microsoft users. She blogs that the change is about a one month away until the new Daylight Saving Time (DST) changes take effect in the U.S. and many other countries, and this was another good article calling attention to the change that seems to be getting more press. (Note that much of Europe won’t switch to European Summer Time until March 25th.)

As Mary Jo noted, Microsoft will start pushing out to Windows users a new update (KB 931836) needed “in order to keep their computer system clocks running on time.” You may’ve already downloaded and installed this currently ‘recommended’ update on Microsoft Update (KB 928388), as we first made it available just after the ‘fall back’ last year.

I noted this week that this new Windows OS update includes a bunch of late-breaking time zones: the new updates include the North American DST 2007 changes as well as other global changes, the change for Western Australia (KB 929120), and several additional changes that have occurred since KB928388 was originally released (such as Newfoundland) to the DST 2007 North American rules.

Turning on Automatic Updates (‘AU’ around the office) ensures that you receive these software updates from Microsoft when they are available next week.  You can configure Automatic Updates to download and install your updates automatically (as I do at home, to run after I go to bed), or you can set AU to download them and then prompt you to install them yourself. (To make sure you have Automatic Updates turned on, visit Microsoft Update).


A note for corporate users with WSUS and SMS: This new update (931836) is a cumulative rollup of prior updates plus additional changes, and will be published on Windows Update and WSUS as an Update Rollup next week on Feb 13th.  Because KB 931836 is an Update Rollup, it will also be available for scanning and deployment using ITMU, the Microsoft Update for IT used by SMS.  Customers who have previously deployed KB928388 and who are not in the newly updated time zone areas do not need to deploy this prior to March 12, but should ultimately roll this update into their environments to ensure complete and accurate time zone databases on all servers and PCs.


Also, there are a few news articles on the DST change that refer to our new site — including USA Today and Cleveland’s First Coast News — and general news coverage in Forbes, PCWorld News and the Houston Chronicle.


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Daylight Saving Time site on Micorsoft.com: A new look and feel

New MScom DST 2007 SiteIt’s the end of another work week and guess what: it’s time once again to update our Daylight Saving Time 2007 Web page on Microsoft.com. (Please see http://www.microsoft.com/dst2007.)


What do you think?


As I noted previously, this public page on the Microsoft.com site will be revised regularly to include new product updates, compatibility information and links to Knowledge Base articles. This week we have a few new additions, including the latest February 2007 cumulative time zone update for Microsoft Windows operating systems (KB article 931836). 


And here’s an update on the quick search query on Live Search for DST in 2007: there’s now 280,783 results: that’s more than 100,000 additional results added in the last couple of weeks,  with more than 513,000 results (+100K) for DST alone. I’ll go out on a limb and estimate that we eclipse 1,000,000 by March 11, 2007.


In the news: As Dan Farber noted, “Research firm Gartner cautioned that infrastructure and application level disruptions are likely to occur, especially within calendaring, billing applications and security applications, as well as in handling travel and trading schedules, starting March 11.”


A repeat: someone asked me today if I would again provide the links of where to send your feedback on DST: here you go…



Whether you agree or disagree with the change to DST, what can you do? For starters, write your state and federal government officials and let them know: in the States, you can find more information on contacting your senators and representatives in DC by going to http://www.usa.gov/Agencies/Federal/Legislative.shtml. The EFF has a website to help you contact US policymakers: http://www.eff.org/congress/.


And remember: even though you may not live in the US or Canada where the changes will be felt, people around the world will be impacted, particularly companies with operations, offices, subsidiaries or connectivity to systems based in the US, Canada or Mexico. This change to US DST has a global impact, so if you live outside the US and Canada, consider contacting your own government officials and tell them what you think.


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ABC’s Sweeney: Success = free, ad-supported TV episodes via the Web

I’ve written previously about ABC’s success providing current, popular TV shows on the web had been a success, saying that 50 million TV episodes requested by web viewers since September, and that “free, ad-supported shows are attracting a younger audience that’s more comfortable watching shows on a computer screen than their parents might have been.”


Once again, my new, favourite exec in Hollywood (with exception to my friends from ReplayTV, Kim, Rob and Craig amoung others), Anne Sweeney, co-chair of Disney Media Networks, is touting the Web success that advertisers and local affiliates are seeing with free rebroadcasts of popular TV shows.


Reuters reports today that Sweeney “told an investor conference that Disney’s ABC Television Network’s ad-supported broadband player, which allows viewers to watch episodes of prime time shows on the Internet, sold out its advertising space for the fourth quarter of last year and the first quarter of this one.”


CEO Robert Iger said that his company thinks that “it is increasing the pie of media consumption” rather than cutting into TV ratings or DVD sales.


No kidding.


I think the same premise with TV shows via the web will parallel the success of music subscription services, as I noted a year ago:



“I would venture to guess that we will see a significant increase when the analysts run the numbers this March, with significant increases: I’ll go out on a limb and estimate that we’ll see a 25% increase YOY (a significant rise over the previous YOY period) of music stored on computers. And that the next billion tunes will chalk up at a faster pace than the first billion… but iTunes may have to play the game of “follow the leader” and offer subscription services of their own in order to get there.”  


Providing “free” (or in the case of music, monthly subscriptions which allows me a buffet approach to listening) is a great way to expose me to shows I would not normally watch. Making episodes free on the web may also entice viewers to watch on the big (TV) screen and as such see the supporting advertising. Not that I’ll be tuning into Ugly Betty any time soon, but I may tune into past episodes of something else.


Back in my days at ReplayTV oh, so many years ago, one of the primary benefits of the DVR was the opportunity to provide more targeted advertising, given you know a) where a DVR resides (by zip code and area code, as privacy polices allow), b) an idea (if you log) of the shows the viewer records and watches, and c) what ads they skip or watch. Networks and their affiliates are again realizing the potential of a more mass-market vehicle — in this case, the web — to benefit from and incorporate local advertising into the TV programming now available via Web viewing.


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