Every appliance in my house (with a clock anyway) and all of our clocks (2 analog, 2 digital) require manual changing. None of them are connected to the internet, which I would think is the only way they would be able to. Do they really make “smart” analog clocks now?
Edit: my car is somewhere in between. It’ll “automatically” change, but I have to turn it on/off. It’s basically just automated the action of moving the hour forward or back.
I feel like mechanical clocks to account for daylight savings this would be a bit off after one or two leap years; could be doable but a bit complicated to design? Kinda fun to think about
Definitely. I’m still going to spend time fascinated by the idea of the gearing and clockwork to make a clock that tracks year/month/day and accounts for leap years.
I’d be more than okay with permanent standard time, myself.
Ah, I forgot Atomic (radio) clocks existed. My parents used to have one of those over a decade ago, but I always saw them as more of a novelty. Not saying they’re not valid, just uncommon IMO.
Yeah it’s funny cause I recently made a post regarding my atomic synced watch on !watches@lemmy.ml. They’re pretty accurate. Though for my situation, I think I might test syncing outside to see if I can get lower latency.
two cars - they’re old enough to not have smart features
Changing them isn’t an issue, and I often don’t get to it for a few days because I rarely actually use them. But it still pisses me off way more than it should.
Who still needs to change their clock manually? Even my 12hr analog clock adjusts itself automatically.
I have a number of clocks that still need to be changed manually. A few wall clocks, the one on the oven, one in the car, etc.
Every appliance in my house (with a clock anyway) and all of our clocks (2 analog, 2 digital) require manual changing. None of them are connected to the internet, which I would think is the only way they would be able to. Do they really make “smart” analog clocks now?
Edit: my car is somewhere in between. It’ll “automatically” change, but I have to turn it on/off. It’s basically just automated the action of moving the hour forward or back.
Some have some kind of date tracking built in. But it’s fairly rare.
I feel like mechanical clocks to account for daylight savings this would be a bit off after one or two leap years; could be doable but a bit complicated to design? Kinda fun to think about
I mean they would be, but that would still be much less clock-changing to do.
Definitely. I’m still going to spend time fascinated by the idea of the gearing and clockwork to make a clock that tracks year/month/day and accounts for leap years.
I’d be more than okay with permanent standard time, myself.
Radio controlled clocks exist. Not everything needs to be connected to the internet.
Ah, I forgot Atomic (radio) clocks existed. My parents used to have one of those over a decade ago, but I always saw them as more of a novelty. Not saying they’re not valid, just uncommon IMO.
Yeah it’s funny cause I recently made a post regarding my atomic synced watch on !watches@lemmy.ml. They’re pretty accurate. Though for my situation, I think I might test syncing outside to see if I can get lower latency.
I have four:
Changing them isn’t an issue, and I often don’t get to it for a few days because I rarely actually use them. But it still pisses me off way more than it should.