Conteplating a move and have always lived in the Eastern time zone

  • @[email protected]
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    126 months ago

    Work culture is earlier to accommodate east coast offices. Weather is WAY better due to lack of humidity. And if you are in the PNW, a noticable lack of bugs. I once heard someone say if the west cost was discovered first, no one would live on the east coast. Worth a visit to see if it is right for you.

    • @[email protected]
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      36 months ago

      I once heard someone say if the west cost was discovered first, no one would live on the east coast.

      Well, not exactly. The natives would’ve still been there, and somehow I don’t believe the early americans would have allowed for that.

  • @[email protected]
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    156 months ago

    This is an east coast vs west coast thing more than timezone pacific, but the ocean on the east coast is way warmer thanks to the Gulf Stream. I’ve been surfing in SoCal in the middle of summer and the water was freezing vs surfing in NY in May and it was tolerable (still cold tho).

    • JackbyDev
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      16 months ago

      I have no white castles near me. In Georgia we have Kystral.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    Sports on the earlier side so you can go to bed at a decent time.

    People are pretty chill.

    Edit: Some disadvantages are pizza is meh and if remote then you may have to work some odd hours to collaborate with colleagues.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      106 months ago

      In my frequent visits to Hawaii in the winter months they are 5 hours behind EST. So NFL games would start at 8AM

    • palordrolap
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      56 months ago

      Saw a video about this recently.

      Apparently west coast sports teams have an advantage over more easterly teams because of circadian rhythms. If you have to travel east a time zone or two to play, you’re playing late in their day, but it’s still early in yours so you’re more awake and up for action.

      If you have to travel west a time zone or two, you get the opposite effect. It’s now very late for you, even if the sun’s still up in this hellish western place. You’re groggy and tired and you’re not as fleet of foot on the sportsball field.

      So basically, on the off-chance that OP’s a pro sportsballer, they might want to bear that in mind.

  • @[email protected]
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    136 months ago

    Americans are bad at geography but shit are people from the east Coast some of the worst. They have “center of the universe syndrome” and have no idea about the rest of the country. I was looking to relocate to the East Coast about 10 years ago and had 3 interviews with different companies in NY, DC and PHL where the company failed to call me at the correct time, sometimes multiple instances, as they couldn’t understand the time difference.

    Doesn’t everyone fucking learn about the 4 continental time zones in school? Why is it confusing?

    • borari
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      106 months ago

      Wait. So you knew you were applying to companies on ET, they said they wanted to set up an interview at some arbitrary time without specifying a time zone, and you just rolled with the assumption that it was PT instead of asking to clarify? That kind of feels like it’s on you. If I was living in ET, I applied to a job with a company located in SF, and I missed the interview bc I assumed it was ET instead of PT that would totally be on me.

      • @[email protected]
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        76 months ago

        No, we agreed on PT. They just didn’t know what the time difference was and couldn’t be bothered to look it up. I finally just started scheduling in ET and then realized I didn’t want to work with people who couldn’t count to 4 and decided not to relocate.

        • borari
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          6 months ago

          Well then yeah they sound ridiculous.

  • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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    146 months ago

    One major disadvantage if you work remotely for an east coast company is that you have to start work 3 hours earlier than everyone else. The advantage I guess is that you get off with a couple hours left in the business day, so you can run errands after work.

    • Drusas
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      26 months ago

      And you have meetings first thing in the morning if anyone on your remote team lives on the East Coast.

    • @[email protected]
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      16 months ago

      Sounds amazing.

      Start work 5 or 6. Stop work 1-2, have daylight for afternoon/evening activities. Sleep by 9.

      Sure a 5am start would suck. But if you can adjust and pull it off, daylight after work all year would be worth it.

    • Pyr
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      16 months ago

      As an early bird I love it. Get everything done before heading out to work.

  • @[email protected]
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    136 months ago

    I’m the opposite, lived most of my life on the West coast and then moved to the East coast. Some time zone related things that I’ve noticed:

    • I love to start work early and end work early, so there was a period of time where I could work 6am to 3pm and still be online later than many of my east coast coworkers. This schedule was ideal for me. Now I have to work until 5 or 6pm every day and I don’t like that very much.

    • I could get up and trade stocks early in the morning, which is convenient for me because I don’t do a lot of stock trading and don’t need to stay on top of it throughout the day. Now I get up and think, “I need to make that transaction later today”, then 4pm rolls around and I realize I’ve forgotten to do it yet again.

    • Not a time zone thing, but I’ve been to Hawaii once and would love to go back. When I was in California, it was a 5-6 hour flight, now its more like 12 hours. I’m not willing to make that trip. I do have the option to go to the Caribbean or Europe instead, which is nice though (if I ever get around to it).

    • I don’t watch sports, but I always thought of the Super Bowl being an afternoon game. Then I moved East and realized people were staying up past midnight to watch the game (and party) and then trying to go to work or school Monday morning. No impact for me, but for my lifestyle, afternoon games would be preferable.

    • I used to do a lot of online gaming with people from all over the US and Europe. Lots of my friends would stay up very late or even all night gaming. I could keep up with them when it meant staying up until 10-12pm (my time). Staying up until 2 or 3am would not work for me. I don’t play online games anymore, but that would be a challenge for me now.

  • @[email protected]
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    36 months ago

    if you come to California your power bill will be fucking high. me and my roomates don’t even really use that much power and just sit on our phones all day in the dark. bill still usually totals in the 300s.

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      If you have four roommates and use AC, that’s really not too bad. Montana with AC (solo occupancy) was $60 for 806 sqft in summer.

  • @[email protected]
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    246 months ago

    A few things to consider if relocating from east to west:

    The seemingly endless open space in the west can have a physical effect. I’ve known east-to-west transplants who were unnerved by what they perceived as a sense of desolation. They felt more at home with dense cities, skyscrapers, a faster pace, urban noise, and an absence of distant horizons.

    The west has a lot of dry and brown land. Unlike the wetter east, most people need to use sprinklers or irrigation. Water is a concern in the west.

    Generally speaking, east communication is more abrupt and unmistakable. West speak can have layers of innuendo that can feel treacherous to people who are accustomed to blunt language.

  • @[email protected]
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    26 months ago

    You can know Japan, South Korea, Australia, new Zealand or many Pacific islands. They have a very diverse culture, you should look it up.

  • @[email protected]
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    26 months ago

    People here keep saying folks are more chill on the West Coast, but I’ve lived in NYC for two years and around California for 8 (mostly the bay area), and this hasn’t been my experience at all. If anything, I’ve noticed the opposite of the stereotype. The California folks tend to be very un-“chill” when I deviate from some social norm by accident, while New Yorkers are generally pretty accepting. I also find when I ask folks out west to be direct because I really need that they way my mind works, they still often don’t, but New Yorkers will. I’m not sure what others mean when they say the West Coast is more chill since it was so much harder for me to get by there-- maybe they’re talking about something else.

    • @[email protected]
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      26 months ago

      I don’t know if NY’ers are more accepting, but they certainly have more DGAF or are hardened against non-normal things because of exposure to a lot of different things as part of metro life.

      I do find people out west to appear to brush off non-normal behavior but start talking about the faux pas as soon as the perpetrator is out of earshot and get judgy. NY’ers might make eye contact, shrug, and/or have a short laugh, then move on.

      CA “chill” is just the result of that brush off. Things are NBD because of that appearance, nobody really invests anything in interaction.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    West Coast is best coast! People are generally a lot more chill than east coast. If you’re of a particular age, just consider Tupac vs. Biggie. Their personalities sum it up nicely.

    Work-wise, business in the US will already be underway when you get to work, and starts dying down after your lunch. If you interact with people on the east coast, mornings are busier and afternoons are much quieter.

    West Coast is generally more racially/ethnically diverse, depending on where you’re comparing. It’s also a lot more liberally aligned. Conservativism hits differently too. There’s less evangelical “Jesus is my personality” types and more “get off my property and leave me alone” conservatives. It’s how legal weed was passed in CO first; conservatives joined in on the yes vote because what you do in your own home isn’t the government’s business.

    The weather is generally better, IMO. It’s drier and sunnier year-round, except for the PNW region. That means less vegetation though. The dense deciduous forests of the south/east have their own appeal, and you just won’t get that out west. The land is a lot more open and sparse.

  • Timezone-wise? Only downsides. Most of our business partners become more difficult to time-coordinate with, since there are fewer business hour overlaps.

    Travel to Europe takes a lot longer.

    Culturally, the West Coast is far more chill. Business on the East cost is very much still dominated by banking-style office politics: business casual is suits, or at least slacks and button-down shirts, there’s a lot of process, everything is serious. West coast is more laid back. I’m speaking in generalities, of course; corporate culture is driven by the corporation, but in general, the West coast has healthier work environments.

    There’s less cultural interesting stuff on the West coast, but far more natural attractions (parks, activities, skiing, hiking, camping, etc etc). Everything is crammed together on the East coast - from Philadelphia you can visit NYC, Washington DC, Gettysburg, Williamsburg, all within 3 hours or less. You can get to Niagara within 6. From Portland, OR, it takes 4 hrs to get to Seattle, and a full 8-hour day to get anywhere interesting in California.

    If you want a more relaxed life with access to vast amounts of incredible nature activities, West coast 100%. If you want to vacation in Europe and visit a huge number of amazing historical sites, East coast.

    • @[email protected]
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      76 months ago

      This. Grew up on the east coast with a go go go atmosphere and all that. Said screw this and moved out west. Sooooo much more relaxed. No one wears suits here at work. I’ll 100% never go back. I like to live, not work all the time.

    • Drusas
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      36 months ago

      We have much better access to Asia. Can get a direct flight to Tokyo. Flying to Tokyo from New York or Philly sucks and I am happy to never have to do it again.

      • borari
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        26 months ago

        Just to clarify, you can get plenty of directs to Tokyo from the East Coast. I know Dulles and Newark at least. They’re 16 hour flights, but that’s what an in flight g&t and a prescription for a fistful of bars are for.

        • Drusas
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          26 months ago

          16 hour flights is more my point. I think never have I wanted to die so much as on a 17-hour flight from Philly to Tokyo. I swore to myself that I could never return to the US because I couldn’t do that again. Obviously, I eventually got over it enough to return, but I don’t think I could ever live on the east coast again as somebody who likes to at least occasionally get out to Japan.

      • tiredofsametab
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        26 months ago

        I actually prefer not laying over when flying to the US East coast, but I also only use japanese airlines which tend to have higher quality food and service.

        • Drusas
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          16 months ago

          Oh, I do the same. They are much better than US airlines. But I start to get extremely uncomfortable after 6 hours on a plane and to go insane after about 10.

      • I flew Philly to Singapore via Dubai, and while it was horrible, the Pacific is enormous and much of the Asian destinations are so far south you can’t use the “over the pole” cheat effectively. In the end, there’s not a huge time difference. NYC to Singapore is 19 hours. San Franscisco to Singapore is 17.5.

        The difference to Europe is far greater; traveling from the West coast vs the East coast can easily double your travel time.

        • Drusas
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          26 months ago

          Sure, but I go to Asia more than Europe. I can get to Japan in about 10 hours from Seattle. Not too shabby.

    • Tanis Nikana
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      186 months ago

      Excuse you, it doesn’t take four hours to get to Seattle, you just have to do like 90 miles an hour between like Kalama and Tacoma, like everyone else.

      • @[email protected]
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        86 months ago

        Then you hit the slowdown at JBLM that’s as inexplicable as it is dependable no matter the day or time.

        • Tanis Nikana
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          66 months ago

          YUUUUP

          Curse the military-industrial complex, that’s reason #3,591!

      • Honestly, the push-back on getting a high-speed rail line between Seattle and SF (or, even better, LA) is baffling. It’s all right there, in a straight line; everything in all three states hugs the coast (or the Valley, in OR). Seattle and Portland even have halfway decent metro systems once you arrive, and SF’s isn’t totally awful. LA’s is useless, but still; rent a car.

        Why can’t they get a high speed rail line done?

        • @[email protected]
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          46 months ago

          The government just approved a bunch of research money for HSR on the cascadia corridor. I’d expect a 4-15 year delay due to the lack of brain cells during the dictatorship years.