- Related Stories
-
FAQ: What the daylight saving shift means to you
October 29, 2007 -
Few glitches after daylight saving shift
March 12, 2007 -
Daylight saving change proves thorny for businesses
March 8, 2007 -
Wake up to the 'daylight saving' bug
February 16, 2007 -
Daylight-saving change could confuse gadgets
August 8, 2005
Looks like not all electronic timekeepers knew that this year's daylight saving time started three weeks earlier than the first Sunday in April, when DST usually kicks off. Across the country, people woke up an hour early or thought they were running an hour late when glancing at a clock that had jumped ahead on the wrong day.
"The clock in my car was an hour off on Sunday," said John Sherwood, director of software engineering at CNET Networks, publisher of News.com. "I was thinking, 'I know getting out of the door with two little kids is hard, but this is getting ridiculous!'"
In Sherwood's case, the culprit was the clock in his 2006 Acura MDX. Patrons of a 24 Hour Fitness facility in Hermosa Beach, Calif., were thrown off by a pair of digital clocks that displayed the incorrect time. In other cases, people got tricked by VCRs and alarm clocks that also jumped ahead three weeks late.
Congress decided in 2005 to extend the period of daylight saving time by three weeks in spring and one in the fall, reasoning that providing more daylight in the early evening would reduce energy use.
But changing the daylight saving schedule has proved to be more involved than simply changing the clock on a different day. The shift has caused trouble with software set to self-adjust on the wrong day.
In the run-up to March 11, the day daylight saving time started, technology companies urged people to patch computers, smart phones and other products with clocks set to self-adjust on the wrong day. Many IT pros were struggling to apply all updates in time.
The move obviously affected calendaring applications, but also could have an impact on time-sensitive applications such as those that process sales orders or keep track of time cards. Analyst firm Gartner predicted problems including incorrect arrival and departure times in the travel industry, errors in bank transactions and cell phone billing software.
But like on April 1, no major disruptions were reported on March 12, the day after daylight saving time started, though some people were experiencing technology glitches. The bulk of the problems arose for people who had not updated their computers or had decided to postpone patching to the last minute, according to Microsoft.
If you were fooled by a clock on Sunday, make sure it gets updated, otherwise you're in for more fun on October 28, when daylight saving time was originally set to end, which now won't be until November 4.
See more CNET content tagged:
clock, billing





But like on April 1, no major disruptions were reported on March 12"
Once again the hype and hysteria from Gartner was overblown. How many times do they get to cry wolf before people stop listening? Why do people actually pay for their advice?
- Humbug!
- by Casting Fool April 3, 2007 9:16 PM PDT
- I read about the new DST change the day that MS cane out with the auto update for it. But I was unaware of the update and tried to apply it manually myself. My new Dell P4 3100, Windows XP Home, had a fit. Had to reboot to even get it back up and running. The new DST setting never took.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(4 Comments)Then I tried to apply the update for my Windows Mobile 5.0 PDA, also a Dell, an Axim X51v. More headaches, as the update did not take there either.
Now I had two units that could not make up their minds between themselves as to what the time was and when all of my appointments were supposed to be. The appointments kept changing times and/or lengths.
I finally cut the PDA off from accessing the time/date of the PC, and had to keep resetting my appointments during the three week period of the new DST thing.
Both units seem to have settled into DST now since 04-01. It would be nice to know what happened when I ran those updates, but I'm really just concerned that things will run smoothly from now on.
Not that I really believe that they will. Wait'll Fall, and things fall back apart...