[Majken's reply was off-list, but we are bringing it back here]
On 08/05/13 01:34, Majken Connor wrote:
> Actually, US/CAN doesn't change clocks every 6 months. We're in DST for
> 8 months of the year.
OK, "every 6 months" was shorthand for "twice a year" :-)
> I wasn't suggesting a gradual shift. I was suggesting that someone else
> test out anchoring the meetings to UTC to collect more data to see if it
> would be worth proposing we make UTC the policy.
>
> I also think your vision of the future is a bit overly dramatic, what
> would happen is people would say "crap, this isn't working, we need to
> shift the meeting according to DST again" and go back to the way things
> were, so really the switch would fail, rather than there being much
> gnashing of teeth ;)
With both the attempt and the switch back being really disruptive.
Dealing with timezones in an international project is an exercise in
trade-offs; there's no perfect solution. And there are reasonably high
costs in switching from one set of trade-offs to a different set. People
who don't like the current set are vocal in arguing for the switch;
people who are less disadvantaged are less vocal perhaps because they
are not motivated to engage in the debate. So there always seems to me
some sort of a mandate for change. However, if we switch, then the
positions reverse and we'll have a mandate for changing back again.
I think we would do much better to encourage regular meeting organizers
(and there are only a limited number of those) to always include a URL
to
timeanddate.com or a similar service, and enhance our browser to make
it easier to add ical events to web calendars.
It might also be good to build a "regular meeting tool", which sent out
meeting reminders. It could also deal with the regularly-encountered
issue of updating dates in headers or URLs. How often do you get a
meeting announcement, then a corrective follow-up because someone forgot
to update the date in e.g. the etherpad link? Such a tool could
integrate with calendars, and promote best practice in reminder-writing.
Gerv