• @RegalPotoo
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    1462 months ago

    As a software dev who has lost weeks of his life dealing with timezones, leap days, daylight savings time, date math and other associated nonsense I fully support this being the way the world is. I don’t want to go through the transition to get there though

    • @[email protected]
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      762 months ago

      Bad news: this has nothing to do with timezones, leap days nor daylight saving time. Honestly, leap days would be worse because they wouldn’t be part of the 7 day week

      • @rockSlayer
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        2 months ago

        It’s accounted for just like any other leap year, add it to the end of a month as a universal holiday. Most calendar models make it July 29. It’s also worth noting that this is actually 364 days, and a single day at the end of the year is a universal holiday.

        Edit: I think leap years should be at the end of the year too for simplicity.

        • @[email protected]
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          112 months ago

          That would just be new year. I’ve already have a list ready for how to name all the months, so we don’t fuck it up like September being the 9. Month again.

        • @[email protected]
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          02 months ago

          Which breaks “day of week = day modulo 7” if every month starts on Monday and not every month has the same number of days

          • @[email protected]
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            132 months ago

            In this scheme, new years day and leap days are not any day of the week or part of any month. They exist outside of the regular calendar as obvious and explicit resets to the remainder problem.

            • @[email protected]
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              22 months ago

              My point exactly. So the programmer who commented above me is wrong in saying it makes it easier for them

              • @[email protected]
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                2 months ago

                No, still easier. They are still part of the year, so you can just count them, and the logic is still easier than the mess we currently have. If you really feel the need to you can call new years day the zeroth day in the zeroth month, the day of the week is Holiday, and periodically the zeroth month has one extra Holiday.

                • @[email protected]
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                  -12 months ago

                  Computers store the date as “days after January 1st 1970”. So you have a huge number, divide it with 7 and get the day of the week. If there are days that don’t belong to any week, you have to calculate January 1st of that year and substrate it in addition to the steps above. I don’t say it’s not manageable, but it’s not easier

          • @grue
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            72 months ago

            Look, short of changing Earth’s orbit, something’s not gonna line up no matter what you do. Extra-weekly days are as good a compromise as any in my book.

          • lad
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            32 months ago

            Leap day and new year day are supposed to not be a week day in this system

            • @[email protected]
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              -42 months ago

              My point exactly. So the programmer who commented above me is wrong in saying it makes it easier for them

      • @[email protected]
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        102 months ago

        Just make them holidays, everyone works too much anyway, and it’s just getting worse for no reason.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 months ago

        Leap day gets it’s own name outside of saturday through sunday. It’s an all awesome holiday.

    • Scrubbles
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      122 months ago

      Developers are the only people against DST changes, just because of how complex it will get. Dear God cities are removing DST! Cities! It means I need to know if you are in or out of a city to know if you need to be shown daylight or standard time!

      Just please do it nationally yes or no

        • @[email protected]
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          32 months ago

          That’s essentially what I did in my recent UI that I made for someone.

          • You want to insert date time
          • Select method: UTC, Time Zone, offset from GMT
          • Enter time
          • I convert it to UTC and send to backend
        • @MotoAsh
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          22 months ago

          That… still requires knowing which time zone to display. It doesn’t remove the requirement at all.

            • @MotoAsh
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              2 months ago

              and who implements localtime? You realize these functions call down to the system, and the system is very much ALSO written and maintained by coders…

              The point is SOMEONE actually does have to implement it and maintain it.

      • @grue
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        52 months ago

        Dear God cities are removing DST! Cities! It means I need to know if you are in or out of a city to know if you need to be shown daylight or standard time!

        That’s why it’s lucky that identifiers in the tz database are already things like America/New_York instead of “eastern time.”

      • @[email protected]
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        12 months ago

        Newfoundland has only just over 500k population and has a nice GMT-2:30 time zone. That’s an extra half hour difference. Many cities are larger so I can see them wanting better time for themselves.

        • capital
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          32 months ago

          Ugh. Any time I need to set up a meeting for IST.

    • @ben_dover
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      22 months ago

      thank you for your service, i usually resort to libraries doing the heavy lifting but even then it’s tough and prone to error

  • 👍Maximum Derek👍
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    562 months ago

    A lunar day is 27.3 days and a solar cycle is 29 and change. So we’d be just off the lunar cycles. Like when you’re sitting waiting for a turn lane signal to change and the person in front of you has a blinker that’s just a tiny bit slower than yours.

  • Mubelotix
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    2 months ago

    France tried such calendar in 1789 and 1871. We lost it when Jules Ferry executed all the communalists in Paris. Some people in France still use those calendars to show their support to revolutionary ideas

    • @AnUnusualRelic
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      92 months ago

      There are a few websites and twitter accounts that remind you that today is Nonidi, 29 Germinal of the year CCXXXII.

      • Mubelotix
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        2 months ago

        I own such a website and I can confirm that this date is right. French wikipedia though is wrong as it uses a bad simplication reform that was never voted

  • Silverchase
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    472 months ago

    We should divide the year into four suits — one for each season. Each suit is thirteen weeks long, numbered ace to king. Sometimes we have a Joker day.

    • @[email protected]
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      72 months ago

      Ah yes, the Balatro calendar. I play a King of Diamonds, which triples the number of days in June and removes October.

  • @ThePyroPython
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    432 months ago

    But how would the corporate world divide the 13 month year into quarters? Don’t you know what that’ll do to the bottom line?! Think of the poor shareholders! /s

    • @NegativeInf
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      382 months ago

      We dine on the rich during month 13.

    • @SlopppyEngineer
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      2 months ago

      The solution to that is having 12 months of 4 weeks each, and one week of solstice every 3 months. One quarter then is 13 weeks in total. That makes it so each quarter perfectly matches a season and keeps it all in sync with solar time. In the ideal case you also match the school holidays to the solstice, and the winter solstice includes new year’s day and leap day, making it just a bit longer for Christmas holidays.

      Yes, I’ve given this a bit too much thought.

    • Flax
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      222 months ago

      3 months and one week. Simples!

    • @TheGrandNagus
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      12 months ago

      Split it to 3 months as is now, then the remainder is 28 days. 28 is divisible by 4 to leave 7.

      Q1 ends 1 week into April, Q2 ends 2 weeks into June, etc.

    • @Adalast
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      222 months ago

      I actually had this happen once. My mental health actually improved, but it was untenable for my job and social life unfortunately. It was kinda nice for a couple months though.

      • lad
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        72 months ago

        Afaik, the effect depends on if you have unusual circadian rhythm or not

        • @Adalast
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          192 months ago

          Yeah, I noticed my rythem in absence of anything teathering it to the socially acceptable world is about 28 hours. Weird that I am not alone in this apparently.

          • @Dicska
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            62 months ago

            There’s dozens of us. Dozens!

          • @[email protected]
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            52 months ago

            i’m pretty confident it’s an evolutionary adaption to ensure there are people in the tribe that are wide awake when others are sleeping, to keep an eye on things.

            same thing with neurodivergence, sexualities, and left-handedness; it’s all stuff that’s been boosting our survival as a species when a portion of the population has those differences.

          • @MotoAsh
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            22 months ago

            Mine settled on 36 hour days and it was fantastic. Plenty of time to work, plenty of time to play, and plenty to sleep, every day. … then I got a 9-5 job and my life became hell again.

            • @Adalast
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              22 months ago

              Sometimes I really hate the modern world. Especially working remotely doing what could be asynchronous work with colleagues, why the hell can’t we just sleep whenever we want, as long as the work gets done.

  • @[email protected]
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    362 months ago

    This reminds me of a fantasy series I like, where the world still has 365 day, but every month is 30 days long, and the remaining 5 days are separate holidays for the solstices, equinoxes, and new years.

    Also, when are we going to do 10hrs/day, 100 min/hr and 100s/min?

    • @[email protected]
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      142 months ago

      Don’t decimalize time, instead dozenalize our numbers! Twelve is such a better building block than ten. Pretty much all math becomes way easier using dozenal numbers instead of decimal ones.

          • Kaityy
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            122 months ago

            Big Decimal has brainwashed the population into thinking that 5 is a good number instead of the terrible prime number that it is. It should be clumped in with 7 and 11 as Bad Numbers when you’re dealing with anything except for 10s.

          • @[email protected]
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            112 months ago

            Yes, but having 2, 3, 4, 6 as factors is way better than having only 2 and 5. We’d be giving up one factor to add three.

    • @[email protected]
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      132 months ago

      Also, when are we going to do 10hrs/day, 100 min/hr and 100s/min?

      This is how you collectively give the entire scientific community a simultaneous aneurysm. The amount of work needed to convert measurements based on our current seconds/minutes/hours to your “metric” seconds/minutes/hours would be astronomical.

      Also, pretty much everyone already agrees on the current system of time, so why change it? It would just create another metric/imperial or F/C divide and cause conversion mistakes.

    • @Sconrad122
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      122 months ago

      Oh god, converting imperial kHz to metric kHz sounds awful

    • HubertManne
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      42 months ago

      I like this better because if you have to do one holiday outside of the calendar then why not 5 and the equinoxes and solsctices divide it up perfectly. Then everything else is nice and even. I assume weeks were six days long as that is how I always thought of it. 5 six day weeks.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 months ago

        Apparently in the series it’s 6 5-day weeks. They also didn’t have names for the days

  • @ummthatguy
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    312 months ago

    In preparation for the upcoming Bell Riots, WWIII, Eugenics Wars, First Contact, Battle of Wolf 359, and Dominion Wars, I say we stop beating around the bush and adopt the Bajoran 26 hour day.

  • @LockheedTheDragon
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    2 months ago

    I do not want my birthday to fall on the same day of the week each year!

    • @NewAgeOldPerson
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      -42 months ago

      Seems like a high price to pay just to test who cares enough.

  • @[email protected]
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    272 months ago

    Can we do something about October being the 10th month of the year. It’s stupid and annoying.

    • @meliaesc
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      262 months ago

      Blame the Caesars, Julius for July and Augustus for August.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 months ago

        That’s a common misconception. For the Romans, the year used to start with March and only have ten months. January and February weren’t even named, it was just the time between harvest and the new year. Several calendar changes followed over the centuries. Adding two months (January and February). Moving the new year to January, which made September-December no longer 7-10. Adding random one-off months to realign with the seasons. And a couple different tries at leap days, among other things.

        This gives a quick overview.

        Edit 2: To clarify, the above changes were all made by the Romans, they only started with a ten month calendar.

        Edit: The fifth and sixth months were originally named Quintilis and Sextilis before they were changed to July and August.

        • @[email protected]
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          22 months ago

          The Romans had twelve months and they even named January and February, it’s usually attributed to Numa Pompilius, second king of Rome sometime during his reign (715–672 BC) of the Roman Kingdom.

          • @[email protected]
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            All covered in the link. The addition of January and February and later moving the new year from March to January is the reason Sept-Dec are no longer the seventh-tenth months. Not July and August, which were renamings, not additions.

            Edit: I suppose my first comment should have specified early Romans. The way I wrote it could be read as all those changes happening after the Romans.

      • VindictiveJudge
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        82 months ago

        I suppose we could fix it by moving the start of the year to March 1st. Start of spring makes more sense for the new year anyway.

    • @meliante
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      52 months ago

      And September (sept=seven), November (nov=nine) and December (dec=ten)…

  • @Etterra
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    202 months ago

    I’ve actual been saying this for years for this exact reason. God forbid we not be able to divide a year into clean quarters.

    • @BigBenis
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      32 months ago

      Three months and one week still seems like a clean quarter to me.

      Alternatively, if we really want to stick to the three-month quarter then we could call the extra week of each quarter an off-week or save it all for the 13th month of the year since nothing really gets done during that time anyway.

      • @mulcahey
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        22 months ago

        Surprisingly, one of the only groups to use this calendar IRL was a giant international corporation: Kodak

  • Doubletwist
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    192 months ago

    Can we start the 1st on Sunday though so every month has a Friday the 13th?

    • Colonel Panic
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      82 months ago

      This is the real discussion piece. We either always have Friday the 13th or we never do again.

      I’m with you for always Friday the 13th.

      Plus, never having one again just feels wrong.