Poll: Do you use a 12 or 24 hour clock?

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sky14kemea

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Jun 26, 2008
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What a strange question...

I dunno, I use 24 hours. My computer and phone both update automatically and they were already set in 24 hours, so I didn't feel like changing it.

Plus knowing me if it was in 12 hour, I'd probably not know whether it was morning or evening.
 

Akjosch

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Sep 12, 2014
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24 hours, 1 second. Synchronised to UTC, no matter where on Earth I am.

I like my clocks precise.
 

Recusant

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Nov 4, 2014
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Twelve hours. It's just easier. And the only real downside is the absurdity of people claiming that noon is at 12 pm, meaning that not only is time capable of traveling through itself, it's capable of being in two (chronological) places at once. You have twelve N and twelve M; everything else is relative to that.

madwarper said:
There is only the 24 clock. And, the correct way to write today's date is 20150210.
Wrong on both counts. There is also the twelve hour clock; try and build a 24-hour sundial if you disagree. And the correct way to write today's date is "February 11th, 2015".
 

DoPo

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Jan 30, 2012
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Recusant said:
Wrong on both counts. There is also the twelve hour clock; try and build a 24-hour sundial if you disagree.
A 12 hour sundial is only going to work for only part of the year. And which part may even depend on your location. Therefore, by your own logic, it's not a good time measurement technology. Which I think the world also believes, because I think that's why we developed this novel way of measuring time that's not based on the sun. When was that done...oh, few centuries ago or so.

Recusant said:
And the correct way to write today's date is "February 11th, 2015".
 

Pyrian

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I used 24 hours almost exclusively for years, and even after all that time, whenever I'd look at, say, "17:00", I would mentally translate that to "5:00pm", so I eventually I just gave up on the whole endeavor.
 

Jamieson 90

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Mar 29, 2010
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For anything typed or written I use the 24 hour clock. If I'm telling someone the time I use the 12 hour one.
 

Poetic Nova

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Jan 24, 2012
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Both work fine for me, but since I mostly rely on the clock that my laptop and phone display I use the AM/PM thingy.
 

doggy go 7

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Jul 28, 2010
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my electronics are all 24 hour, and will be set that way if they aren't. My watch is (obviously) 12 hour, and I genuinely actually use it. I will usually, when saying a time, say it in 12 hour (and just add "in the afternoon", though usually do you want to go out at 11 is unambiguous enough within the context of a conversation), but I can and will be clearer if it's needed. I have no difficulty switching between the two (unless I think about it too hard, and then my dyslexic brain will sometimes do weird things)
 

Vendor-Lazarus

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Mar 1, 2009
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At The time of writing it is now: 2015-02-11 19:34:12:55

Twothousandfifteen O'Two Eleven Nineteen:Thirtyfour Twelve Fiftyfive.
 

CrystalShadow

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Apr 11, 2009
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depends on what i'm doing. flying a plane is done using the 24 hour clock, for personal use I'm kind of haphazars, but I think almost all the clocks on my devices are set to 24 hour time, so... Probably that.

I also prefer to write dates as year-month-day wherever possible. Much more sensible. XD
 

Recusant

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Nov 4, 2014
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DoPo said:
Recusant said:
Wrong on both counts. There is also the twelve hour clock; try and build a 24-hour sundial if you disagree.
A 12 hour sundial is only going to work for only part of the year. And which part may even depend on your location. Therefore, by your own logic, it's not a good time measurement technology. Which I think the world also believes, because I think that's why we developed this novel way of measuring time that's not based on the sun. When was that done...oh, few centuries ago or so.
Don't forget location; in parts of the world, it's not going to work at all. A 24-hour sundial, however, wouldn't work at all anywhere on Earth. I didn't say it was a perfect method; merely that it was a better one. And while a method of measuring time that's not based on the sun would be great, we don't have one. Hours, days, and years are still measured based on the position of the sun relative to the earth;

DoPo said:
Recusant said:
And the correct way to write today's date is "February 11th, 2015".
Recusant said:
And the correct way to write today's date is "February 11th, 2015".
I have exactly as much authority to dictate the actions of others as some schlub with a webcomic does. Having a larger audience confers neither legal nor moral authority.
 

DoPo

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Recusant said:
DoPo said:
Recusant said:
Wrong on both counts. There is also the twelve hour clock; try and build a 24-hour sundial if you disagree.
A 12 hour sundial is only going to work for only part of the year. And which part may even depend on your location. Therefore, by your own logic, it's not a good time measurement technology. Which I think the world also believes, because I think that's why we developed this novel way of measuring time that's not based on the sun. When was that done...oh, few centuries ago or so.
Don't forget location; in parts of the world, it's not going to work at all.
Yes, duly noted - I went back in time to address that issue for you.

Recusant said:
A 24-hour sundial, however, wouldn't work at all anywhere on Earth. I didn't say it was a perfect method; merely that it was a better one.
How is a sundial better than...well, anything more advanced than it. Which is anything that human race has used for the past several centuries.

Recusant said:
And while a method of measuring time that's not based on the sun would be great, we don't have one. Hours, days, and years are still measured based on the position of the sun relative to the earth;
Yes, but not by LITERALLY directly measuring the sun. With a friggin sundial. Which, as I pointed out, nobody actually uses as a time measuring device. Your entire argument of "sundial - 12 hours" is so incredibly mind boggling, the thought you are actually sticking to it, I still have trouble processing logically. WHY? What sense does this make at all? Are you going to denounce internal combustion because actual horses exist and are still able to pull carriages?

Recusant said:
DoPo said:
Recusant said:
And the correct way to write today's date is "February 11th, 2015".
Recusant said:
And the correct way to write today's date is "February 11th, 2015".
I have exactly as much authority to dictate the actions of others as some schlub with a webcomic does. Having a larger audience confers neither legal nor moral authority.
[Joke]
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[your head]
 

trollnystan

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Dec 27, 2010
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I'm Swedish, so 24-hour?

I mean, I KNOW both of course, and most wall clocks are 12-hour ones. But when you make appointments, check tv listings, etc, most is written in 24-hour mode. If someone asks you the time you reply with the 12-hour clock, although I have to double check and ask if they mean (for example) 15:30 or 14:30; "It's half-three" means 14:30 when said in Swedish. I tend to use the 24-hour clock even when talking aloud just to make sure they know what I mean, even though I'm basically the only person I know who has this problem.

I'm damaged >_>
 

Louis.J

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Jul 9, 2010
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I have never seen a dial having 24 hours.

Weak joking aside, I live in Denmark and anything other than 24 hours on digital clocks would be seen as profoundly eccentric. I am sure many digital appliances does not even have other options.
 

Victim of Progress

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Jul 11, 2011
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Military time, baby. It is much more convenient that a 12 hour format. It is so much easier to use and explain to someone.
 

Akjosch

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Sep 12, 2014
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Recusant said:
try and build a 24-hour sundial if you disagree.
Every sundial is a 24-hour sundial. Every. Single. One.

It's just that sometimes stuff gets in the way: Earth, clouds, occasionally the Moon.

If you look at the sundial's shadow in the right spectrum however (one where those things are mostly transparent), or through a neutrino detector, it'll work all the time.

Alternatively, drop it in the Earth-Sun L4 or L5 point, with a synchronised rotation to the one of the Earth.
 

Elementary - Dear Watson

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Nov 9, 2010
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Jark212 said:
Well ,i'm in the military so i tend to use a 24 hour clock for everything, even if I have a 12 hour clock I'll just automatically convert it in my head. It gets kinda annoying when my regular friends ask me what time is is and I tell them it's 1430.
all those weird looks...
This... this very much. Especially when I am tired and a mate asks the time and I forget to switch the filter on... 'Oh, it's twenty three hundred hours.'

Luckily I live on base, so most of the people I live with and see use it too, so it's not so bad!
 

Nieroshai

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Aug 20, 2009
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I'd love to switch to a 24-hour clock, but the problem is that everyone I interact with day-to-day uses the 12-hour clock. It's annoying to watch people ticking off the simple conversion in their heads.