15 March 2021

Daylight Saving Time

Once again, the United States has suffered another "spring forward", and the thoughts of permanent Daylight Saving Time enters the consciousness of its citizens and representatives. It's a very popular opinion to hold, banishing the time change. For some reason, people glom onto permanent Daylight Savings Time instead of permanent Standard Time, like Arizona and Hawaii have done. I never understood that.

Opting out of Daylight Saving Time is allowed under federal law, so states can stick with Standard Time. If a representative really believes in permanent Daylight Saving Time, it can be emulated by adopting permanent Standard Time, and mandating state government offices open an hour earlier than they currently do. Problem solved, and it's implementable under current federal law.

The other question I wonder is if people understand the implications of non-shifting time zones. Let's take four examples from the Pacific Time Zone, from north to south:

CityEarliest SunriseLatest SunriseEarliest SunsetLatest Sunset
Seattle, Washington4:11 AM PST
5:11 AM PDT
7:57 AM PST
8:57 AM PDT
4:17 PM PST
5:17 PM PDT
8:11 PM PST
9:11 PM PDT
Portland, Oregon4:21 AM PST
5:21 AM PDT
7:50 AM PST
8:50 AM PDT
4:27 PM PST
5:27 PM PDT
8:03 PM PST
9:03 PM PDT
San Francisco, California4:47 AM PST
5:47 AM PDT
7:25 AM PST
8:25 AM PDT
4:50 PM PST
5:50 PM PDT
7:35 PM PST
8:35 PM PDT
San Diego, California4:40 AM PST
5:40 AM PDT
6:51 AM PST
7:51 AM PDT
4:41 PM PST
5:41 PM PDT
7:00 PM PST
8:00 PM PDT

If the West Coast of the United States stuck with Standard Time, the sun would rise in the four o'clock hour in the summers. Conversely, if the West Coast stuck with Daylight Saving Time, in the winter, the sun wouldn't rise until almost nine in the morning. Except in San Diego, because it's so far East.

So is not implementing a time switch twice a year preferred? I don't think you can ask someone from Arizona or Hawaii. Both states seem well situated for their time zones, with reasonable sunrise and sunset ranges. The time switch is certainly a painful adjustment, no matter if you're gaining or losing an hour.

24 January 2021

Word of the Day: Ad Hominem

 This week's word of the day sketch is ad hominem.


Annoyingly, brushes don't seem to scale when zooming in and out of documents in Krita. Is it an old Wacom tablet thing, a Linux thing, or just a thing, I wonder?

18 January 2021

Word of the Day: Effusive

2020 was supposed to be the year I attempted Inktober, or something similar. But October came and went, and I completely forget about it. "Next year," I told myself, as I did the year before, and the year before that. But why wait? Getting word prompts is easy. Online dictionaries readily offer them up. Merriam-Webster even has permalinks to theirs.

One drawing a day seems a bit onerous. One per week seems more reasonable, so I came up with the following "rules":

  • Read the definition of the Saturday Word of the Day on Merriam-Webster.com. Draw it and post it here before the next Saturday.
  • Is Saturday's Word of the Day just utterly uninspiring? Choose a different word of the day from the previous week. But use Saturday's if at all possible.
  • If you miss a week, get back on the proverbial horse.

I expect it'll be a bunch of quick sketches at first. I may put more effort into it once I get comfortable drawing on my very old Wacom tablet (the one I was using to draw Home Run) in Krita.

With that, the inaugural Word of the Day sketch is effusive.