European friends, prepare for the pain of time zone rule changes announced with too little notice. See the proposed directive at the end of ec.europa.eu/commission/prio… When the US did this in 2007, most calendar software bound timezone rules to events when the events were created.
🕒 We are proposing to end seasonal clock changes in Europe in 2019. The last mandatory change to summertime would take place on Sunday 31 March 2019. #SOTEU #ClockChange #EfficientEU
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Maybe things are better now, but I'm not optimistic, especially when multiple calendar programs are involved. Think about recurring events. That "every Monday at 10am" meeting that you've already created could be "every Monday at 10am by the old timezone rules".
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Six months notice seems like too little for the timezone database to be patched, all operating systems to ship that update, everybody to get that update, and then complete all the recurring meetings or cross-country video meetings scheduled prior to the update.

Sep 15, 2018 · 2:14 AM UTC

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Replying to @davidbaron
April is the last time all countries switch to summer time per the old rules, then in October they (each) have the choice to stay on "summer" time or switch to winter time one final time. That's effectively a year's notice.
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But the countries have until six months before to say whether they will switch back.
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Replying to @davidbaron
That's about the same amount of advance notice there will be for the new Japanese era name. Although at least it's already been known for more than a year that there would be a change and when.