On Feb 16, 2014, at 3:05 PM, Clive D.W. Feather <[email protected]> wrote:

> Brooks Harris said:
> 
>> "Where daylight saving time is used, the term standard time typically 
>> refers to the time without the offset for daylight saving time.".
>> 
>> That is consistent with my understanding of "Standard time".
> 
> But not mine.
> 
> "standard time" is to be contrasted with "local time". Both GMT and BST are
> "standard time" in the UK.

Interesting.

My personal experience of what is typical usage in the U.S. and Chile would be 
the opposite.  "Local" time almost universally means what the clock says right 
now (or said at the time in question).

On the other hand, calling something standard time (e.g., "Pacific Standard 
Time") never means daylight saving time, rather that is "Pacific Daylight 
Time").  Contrast EST, CST, MST and PST with EDT, CDT, MDT and PDT.  Since 
Arizona (outside Navajo lands) never observes MDT, this is something we're 
sensitive to from having to shift schedules twice a year relative to everybody 
else in the country.

The observatory also has telescopes and personnel in Chile, and the 
anti-correlated seasonal daylight saving time shifts from CLT to CLST are 
referred to similarly.  (I'd welcome correction regarding differences in 
Spanish usage.)  In the U.S. I've lived in MA, PA, WY and HI (which also 
doesn't observe DST) and usage was similar to what I describe: local time means 
what the clock says and standard time refers to the opposite of daylight saving 
time.

It would be interesting to explore the usage in other locations and by various 
communities.  And of course, only a minority of the world's population observe 
DST at any time of the year, so it might be moot to distinguish the two in 
places that don't.

Anybody from Canada want to report on usage?  There's a large overlap in 
timezones with the U.S., but as a member of the Commonwealth you might be 
expected to have usage derived from the U.K.

Rob

_______________________________________________
LEAPSECS mailing list
[email protected]
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/leapsecs

Reply via email to