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On 3/11/2024 12:48 PM, shawn wrote:I do set the stove, it's another reference point for me to keep track of time when I have to be somewhere, and can't see the others.On Mon, 11 Mar 2024 11:48:48 -0700, suzeeq <suzee@imbris.com> wrote:I don't wear a watch (haven't for many years, as pretty much EVERYTHING that includes electronics in it these days has a visible clock) and I just never set the clock on the microwave or electric stove in the first place.
>On 3/11/2024 11:08 AM, anim8rfsk wrote:>suzeeq <suzee@imbris.com> wrote:I don't have magic clocks that automatically know the time. And I don'tOn 3/11/2024 8:43 AM, Adam H. Kerman wrote:>Arthur Lipscomb <arthur@alum.calberkeley.org> wrote:>
>The time change through me for a loop. I knew it was happening but>
wasn't sure which day it was happening or if I was gaining or losing an
hour.
Spring ahead! Fall back! Since daylight is being "saved", think about
the time of sunset being moved back an hour from standard time. That's
how I remember that the clock gets set ahead.
But sunset moves forward in the spring.>>Then I saw the clock on my stove was an hour earlier. When I was
a kid I had manually change all the clocks which helped a bit, but now
with almost every clock in the house automatically changing the time by
the time I wake up it's like I involuntarily time traveled without
knowing it.
I figure it out by looking at my cellphone or the computer, then reset
the other clocks.
>
And you shouldn’t have to do that. At all.
>
want them.
I had to get a new alarm clock back last year. It sets the time itself
including adjusting for Daylight Savings Time. Oh, and of course my
computer resets the time automatically. Which is enough for me. I can
reset my watch and microwave when I think about it.
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