We know we need to "spring forward", but why do we change our clocks twice a year?
We know we need to "spring forward", but why do we change our clocks twice a year?
Don't be fooled by that Matterhorn-sized snow pile that the plow left Friday outside your window or in the parking lot at work. It's time to spring ahead. In what most would consider a more pleasant sign of the season than a three-day nor'easter
Get ready to set those clocks ahead one hour. Daylight saving time begins at 2 a.m. this Sunday, March 10.
With more and more people using radio clocks (sometimes inaccurately called atomic clocks), clocks on mobile phones and clocks on any other online device like a cable box or computer, switching to and from daylight saving time has become less of a chore.
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