Apple’s DST solution ‘very poor’, say local users
September 30, 2007
Daylight savings time started yesterday here in New Zealand (earlier than usual), but while Microsoft was out informing customers and distributing patches, Apple simply recommended customers manually put their clocks forward an hour. This is a very poor solution, says one local developer.
It seems New Zealand at least is not high on Apple’s “important market” list… Where is it again?
(Via computerworld.co.nz)
If you manually bump your clock forward it will give you the correct time when you read it on the screen, but in relation to the time in the rest of the world, the clock on your computer is an hour fast, says Karl von Randow, of multimedia studio Cactuslab in Auckland.
Apple did not release an update to OS X in time for New Zealand’s daylight saving time changes. Instead, the company recommended users go into system preferences and bump their clock forward an hour on the 30 September. To do this users will need to turn off automatic time updates, and then set their clock back to the correct time when the old daylight saving rule starts on October 7, says an Apple spokeswoman.
Another thing that can go wrong if users manually bump their clocks forward is the timestamp when saving files, says von Randow. If someone saves a file on, for example, Monday morning — when the computer is an hour faster than the world and thinks it is in a standard time zone — it is going to show the correct timestamp on the computer, he says. But when Apple retrospectively fixes that time zone, the timestamp on the file saving is going to be wrong.
This is probably not going to affect a lot of people, but it could cause problems for people who are using Mac OS X as a server, he says. Around midnight, the hour difference could mean yesterday or today. Cactuslab has installed a third party patch written by Wellington developer Glenn Anderson.
There was a special daylight saving update prior to the US rule change earlier this year, writes David Empson, president of the Wellington Macintosh Society, on the society’s website.
Apple also released a patch specifically for Western Australia three weeks before DST changed there, says Empson. This patch was made available via Apple Australia’s website and the Western Australian government site.
It is “very disappointing” that Apple didn’t update its operating system in time, Empson says.
See original article by Ulrika Hedquist here




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