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Your questions: Why did parts of Indiana just move to the Eastern time zone?

“I saw that several Indiana counties will move from the Central time zone to Eastern time. When did this happen?”

This was announced yesterday by the DOT, as noted in this article

“The U.S. Department of Transportation announced Thursday a final rule moving five Indiana countries — Daviess, Dubois, Knox, Martin and Pike — from the Central to Eastern time zone. The five counties, which filed a joint petition for the time zone change, will observe Eastern time beginning Nov. 4, when daylight saving time ends.

“At the same time, the Department denied a separate petition from Perry County to also move from the Central to Eastern time zone.

“With the change, 80 of Indiana’s 92 counties and more than 5 million of the state’s 6.2 million citizens will observe Eastern Time.”

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Venezuela announces a delay in their time zone move… again

And you thought it was a slow news day on the time zone front…


Yes, more on Venezuela’s new time zone.

First it was announced that Venezuela would change their time zone by 30 minutes, by turning their clocks back on January 1, 2008… then September 17… and more recently September 24th.

Now Reuters reports today that there’s been confusion in Venezuela with the announced time change… so much so that the government officials behind the change aren’t sure whether to spring forward or fall back.


President Hugo Chavez wants Venezuelan clocks turned back half an hour and he wants it done in record time — next Monday.

“I don’t care if they call me crazy, the new time will go ahead, let them call me whatever they want,” Chavez said on his weekly TV show. “I’m not to blame. I received a recommendation and said I liked the idea.”

Chavez himself has not had time to get to grips with the practicalities of the clock shift.

In his live show, he talked with his brother, the education minister, so that the two men could explain the measure. But they mistakenly told Venezuelans to move their clocks forward at midnight on Sunday, when the policy is to move them back.


Wait: that’s not all.

We have reports tonight that the government may delay the half-hour move all together until October (see this link and translation ) as they…


“… need to notify the international organizations such as the Bureau the International of Weights and Measures and the Bureau the International of the Measurement of the Time, located in France.



“It will take at least two to three weeks for the change to take shape. The President of the Republic (Hugo Chavez) will make the official announcement of when [people] will have to move their clocks by half an hour…

“The change of the time zone of Venezuela will take shape within two or three weeks… according to vice-minister of Planning of the Ministry of the Popular Power for Science and Tecnología, Luis Marcano González.”


We are confirming this with our offices in the region.

For now, we are holding the down level hotfix packages, as noted in KB 938977 which has been held back for the moment. As soon as we receive approval from our offices in the region, we will repost the KB and the packages will be available.

Update: The KB is now live and you can request the hotfix by going to http://support.microsoft.com/gp/CUHotFix_LandingPage_Request.

Tags: Microsoft, Daylight Saving Time, Daylight Savings Time, DST, Time Zones, Venezuela. 629,596; 907,942; 1,750,000+

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Update on DST changes in Venezuela: time goes back on September 24th

As I previously noted, Venezuela is changing their time zone. We were able to confirm that Venezuela time zone has been confirmed to GMT -4:30 as original planned.


We now hear from government sources that the new DST change will begin Sept 24 (next Sunday) when at midnight clocks will move backwards 30 minutes. This will be a ½ hour change, from UTC-4:00 GMT to UTC-4:30.


It appears that this is the creation of a new time zone (as noted http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/timezone.html?n=58): to date, Venezuela observed AST, and now is essentially cretaing their own TZ  as of September 24, 2007.


We don’t know yet if this is a permanent change or if this is a move to their new DST.


We will have more information on this change at http://support.microsoft.com/gp/dst_hottopics, and we expect to have a Windows OS hotfix for currently supported products available prior to the change.


Tags: Microsoft, Daylight Saving Time, Daylight Savings Time, DST. 632,522; 951,689; 1,750,000+

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News: EU court dismisses Microsoft appeal

in today’s news, the EU court dismissed Microsoft appeal — $613 million fine upheld, as noted in the Seattle Times. (Also see this opinion that the EU court’s Microsoft ruling could overturn regulatory landscape.)

Click here for the latest news on Microsoft.

Additional news stories:

Microsoft suffers decisive EU antitrust defeat

Microsoft case boosts Europe’s lead role in regulating dominant companies, legal experts say

Quit pickin’ on Microsoft, EU

EU court essentially upholds EU 2004 antitrust decision vs Microsoft

Microsoft says it may need to do more to comply with EU antitrust

FAQs- What the ruling means for Microsoft

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Net Neutrality: will it help spur improvements for customers, or slow infrastructure and development?

The kids are asleep and I’m catching up on my Sunday reading, mail and a few bills. I noticed as I paid the cable bill online that I received a link to a Seattle Times editorial this weekend, tackling the challenge in DC around a network neutrality bill that Congress could pass later this year.  (See also this companion piece that calls attention to issues around the current level of service.) 

“Free the Internet …

“Democracy is meaningless without structure. It requires support and infrastructure to become a word capable of giving entire nations voice and freedom.”

The concept is that the Internet is, in the US, owned by the people.  Given that the Internet was a started by DARPA and funded by the US government (read “taxpayers”), the basic framework of the Internet in the States (and now, around the world) is “free” — it’s essentially the last mile (or a couple of DSL to the CO) and the network management I pay for in a monthly fee to my cable and telco providers. 

Now, I (along with several hundred million folks in this country) may own the airwaves, but I pay for the pipes to get television into our household. It’s the same story for a majority of people who live in this country (as well as many others), paying a premium so our kids can get their fill of Hannah Montana and the Discovery Channel. 

The NCTA estimates that of the 111.3M television households in the States, 65.5M are basic cable subscribers: that’s almost 60%.  About half of those households (33.5M) are cable broadband subscribers.  And to keep the Internet flowing to and from my home, connecting me to the world, cable companies spent more than $12 billion last year on construction and upgrades

Given all that investment, I would like to see my basic connection speeds rise in tandem with my monthly cable bill, especially when you compare access speed/price around the world.  But even as milk and eggs get more expensive with each passing year, I see the same amount in the carton: why should the Internet be any different?  As a consumer, I expect to see certain prices for other “free” bandwidth fall, such as telephony. We’ve seen competition in basic mobile phone offerings increase, and correspondingly costs drop year over year; of course, mobile carriers offer more and more value-added services to keep my monthly bills up.

Back to ‘net access.  The US is not at the top of the stack rank when it comes to Internet access as compared with Asia, where I  noted last year that you could get 100Mbps access for less than the average cost of 6Mbps in the States… 

“Hong Kong’s City Telecom offers 100Mbps service for about US$25 a month… [and] for the same price as 1Gbit access in HK, you can have up to 30Mbps in New Jersey and other major markets. .”

.. and 100 Mbps FTTH for $36 a month in Japan.  Population density certainly helps, but even in major North American downtown metropolitan areas you don’t see that sort of offer from your local ISP. 

Counterpoint is this commentary from Randolph J. May in the The National Law Journal last year, Net Neutrality Would Violate the First Amendment Rights of ISPs. In it, May says…

“As a matter of policy, Congress should be very hesitant to pass a law in anticipation of conjectured harms that may never materialize. As the Internet continues to evolve, such a law almost certainly would turn out to be overly broad in application, restricting efficient business arrangements that otherwise would allow ISPs to make available services demanded by consumers at lower costs. Moreover, the vague terms of the mandates would be grist for the litigation mills for years to come.

AT&T (in their merger with SBC) agreed not to sell premium access Internet to customers for two years.  But that’s not what concerns me as a customer: even past that short moratorium, IMHO ISP’s shouldn’t have the option to degrade any third-party service over my connection.  With a multitude of offerings from cable and telco providers, I trust that I won’t see the equivalent of a gas or electric meter attached to the side of my cable hookup — data is data and should be treated equally. 

There are ISP services and offerings that may help win my future business as a consumer, including IPTV, with network DVR and HDTV.  And higher network bandwidth, especially as the boys spend more and more time on the net doing their homework 😉

More links of interest:

Tags: net neutrality, consumers, ISP, Internet.