In August of 2005 the United States Congress passed the Energy Policy Act, which changes the dates of both the start and end of daylight saving time (DST). When this law goes into effect in 2007, DST will start three weeks earlier (2:00 A.M. on the second Sunday in March) and will end one week later (2:00 A.M. on the first Sunday in November) than what had traditionally occurred.
| Change in daylight saving time: | |||
|
Previously DST Started on: |
With the new law DST will Start on: |
Previous DST Ended on: |
With the new law DST will End on: |
|
First Sunday of April |
Second Sunday of March |
Last Sunday of October |
First Sunday of November |
|
Would have been: April 1, 2007 |
Will now be: March 11, 2007 |
Would have been: October 28, 2007 |
Will now be: November 4, 2007 |
While the change in daylight saving time applies to U.S. and Canada, the change may impact customers based outside North America. Companies or organizations with operations, customers or vendors based in North America may be affected. In addition customers who interact or integrate with systems that are based in North America or rely on date/time calculations may be impacted.
Please note that Mexico will not be following the new DST 2007 rules with the U.S. and Canada. Accordingly such systems configured to use U.S. time zones (for example, Pacific Time) will need to change their system configurations to use the new Mexico time zones.
| Areas Impacted by this change in daylight saving time: | ||
|
All of the United States except: Arizona, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and American Samoa |
Canada Canada and the United States share DST |
Mexico Mexico will not be following the new DST 2007 rules |
The change in DST will have an impact on many automated and technology reliant products. Individual consumers, small to medium size businesses, and large enterprises may be impacted by the new change in time. Computer-system related impacts include, for example:
| • |
Calendar / scheduling applications |
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Date / time calculations (current and historical) |
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Transaction logging (UTC vs. Local Time) |
| • |
Tariff billing applications |
In many cases, making the necessary changes to accommodate the new DST legislation will be a relatively minor task. Users may need to manually adjust the time on their devices when the change occurs.
In other cases, more substantial efforts may be required. In some cases, systems and applications may need to be updated directly, while in others, the application may simply inherit or "read" the date and time information from the underlying system that it resides on so the changes need only be made to that underlying system. Given the broad range of technology in use today—and the integration of systems between customers, vendors, and partners—business and IT managers should determine what actions should be taken to mitigate the impact of DST 2007 on their organizations.
Microsoft is committed to working with customers to make this transition as seamless as possible for customers affected by these new time changes. We are further committed to working with others in the industry to address the broader challenges presented by this U.S. statute.
Several Microsoft products are affected by DST. Updates to these products are being developed and tested. Some of them are currently available, with the remainder scheduled to be released from December 2006 through early March 2007.
| Microsoft Products affected by the DST legislation |
|
Windows Client
|
Depending on the particular product or scenario, these updates will be released through Microsoft Customer Support Services (CSS), Hotfixes incorporated in Knowledge Base articles, Windows Update, Microsoft Update, Windows Server Update Services (WSUS), and the Microsoft Download Center.
All users of Microsoft products affected by the time change should give extra attention to appointments scheduled during the extended DST period (March 11, 2007 to April 1, 2007 and Oct 28, 2007 to November 4, 2007). Users should view any appointments that fall into these date ranges as suspect until they communicate with all meeting invitees to make sure that the item shows up correctly on everyone's calendar both internally and externally. To minimize confusion during the affected date ranges:
| • |
Include the time of the meeting in the e-mail request so that invitees can double check the correct meeting time (such as, "Project brainstorming - 11:00 A.M. Eastern Time"). |
| • |
Accept prompts to update time zone information when requested. |
Updated time zone definitions will ship with Windows Vista, however earlier versions of the operating system will need an update. For Windows XP Service Pack 2 (SP2), Windows Server 2003, and Windows Server 2003 Service Pack 1 (SP1), Microsoft will release a single global time zone update which will include changes for the United States DST change. This time zone update will also include changes for other related DST changes and time zone behavior and settings that will take place in 2007 or have taken place since these versions of Windows were originally released. It will include some changes that have previously been released as individual hotfixes (such as the Sri Lanka change in time zone offset) or have been individually documented in prior Knowledge Base articles.
| Areas Impacted by this change in daylight saving time: | ||
|
Windows Vista |
No update needed |
Updated time zone definitions will ship with Windows Vista |
|
Windows XP (SP2), Windows Server 2003, Windows Server SP1 |
Update available |
The Windows XP SP2 and Windows Server 2003 updates are available for production deployment for all customers through the Microsoft Download Center and Knowledge Base article 928388. The update will be available via Windows Update, and WSUS on December 12, 2006. While this update is being offered as optional now, once Outlook and Exchange tools are completed so that all updates and tools can be run at the same time, we expect to change the classification of 928388 to high priority or critical. At this time all customers should have removed the test version of the Windows time zone update released under Knowledge Base article 924840. |
|
Windows 2000 |
Update available - (under Extended Hotfix Support) |
Windows 2000 has passed the end of Mainstream Support and will not be receiving an update without Extended Hotfix Support. All versions of Windows can be manually updated using the tzedit.exe utility or other techniques documented in Knowledge Base article 914387 and similar articles for other countries, which is the preferred method of remediation for any product outside of Mainstream Support. (The tzedit.exe tool allows you to create and edit time zone entries for the Date/Time settings in the Control Panel, especially for daylight-saving time). |
|
Windows XP SP1 |
Not Supported |
Windows XP SP1 is no longer supported. Find information regarding support options for Windows XP SP1. |
|
Windows NT 4 |
Not Supported |
Windows NT4 is no longer supported. Find information regarding support options for Windows NT4. All versions of Windows can be manually updated using the tzedit.exe utility or other techniques documented in Knowledge Base article 914387 and similar articles for other countries, which is the preferred method of remediation for any product outside of Mainstream Support. |
For many of the Microsoft products affected by the 2007 daylight saving time change, the most recent versions will not require an update. However, earlier versions of these products will require an update, as shown below. Find more information on Microsoft Support Lifecycle.
| Other Microsoft applications | |
|
Outlook |
Outlook 2007: No update needed. Outlook 2003, XP and 2000: An Outlook Data Update Tool will be available in January from the Download Center. |
|
Exchange Server |
Exchange Server 2007: No update needed. Exchange Server 2003 Service Pack 2: Final update will be available in January 2007 through CSS, Microsoft Update, and the Microsoft Download Center. A test version of the 2007 daylight saving time update for Exchange Server 2003 SP2 is now available in KB article 926666. The official release will also be under the same KB number. Exchange Server 2003 Service Pack 1: SP Service Support will be retired January 9, 2007 so Exchange 2003 SP1 is not eligible to receive this update. Exchange Server 2000/Exchange Conferencing Server 2000: Updates are available now. Exchange 2000 is under Extended Support. Customers with Extended Hotfix Support Agreements (EHSAs) can request hotfix through their Technical Account Managers. Exchange Server 5.5: The update is available now. Exchange 5.5 is under Custom Support phase until January 2008. Customers with Customer Support Agreements (CSAs) can request a hotfix through their Technical Account Managers. Exchange Server 2003 Lotus Notes Connector: Download available at Microsoft Download Center (search for "Exchange Server 2003 Connector for Lotus Notes"). Exchange versions out of mainstream support without EHSA or CSA: No workaround or update available. |
|
Windows SharePoint Services |
Windows SharePoint Services 3.0: No update needed. Windows SharePoint Services 2.0: Update available on January 9, 2007 and delivered via Microsoft Update. |
|
Microsoft Dynamics CRM |
Microsoft CRM 3.0: Update delivered via Hotfix available in March 2007. See KB article 925874. |
|
Windows Mobile |
Windows Mobile: See KB article 923953. |
|
Windows CE based devices |
Windows CE: See KB article 923027. |
To display the correct time for meetings scheduled during the extended DST period, end users will need to have their operating systems patched such that it reflects the new time zone definitions.
Users will then either manually change the Calendar time zone (available from the 'Calendar Options…' dialog on Tools | Options) or respond to the automatic prompts to change their Calendar time zone that will occur 1 to 7 days after the DST rules are updated on the machine.
Without an update, the following will occur for Outlook calendar items that are active during the weeks of March 11, 2007 to April 1, 2007, and October 28, 2007 to November 4, 2007: Appointments and reminders will appear one hour earlier than they should. All-day events will shift and span two days because these events are associated with 24 specific hours rather than an individual date.
Microsoft has incorporated a new feature into Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 to help adjust calendar items affected by time zone changes.
For other releases of Outlook, Microsoft will release an Outlook Data Update Tool. This tool is scheduled for release in January and will be available in the Download Center.
Microsoft calendar software such as Outlook depends on the operating system time zone information to display time information. However, Collaboration Data Objects (CDO)-based programs such as Outlook Web Access depend on separate internal time zone tables. This update modifies these internal time zone tables to match the changes in time zone settings. Without this update, calendar items in CDO-based programs will operate as if standard time is in effect during the extra weeks of daylight saving time.
For Exchange Server 2003 Service Pack 2 (SP2), Microsoft will release a global time zone update in January 2007 which will include changes for the components affected in Exchange Server. This time zone update will also include changes for other related DST changes and time zone behavior and settings that have taken place since Exchange Server 2003 was originally released. It will also include changes that have previously been released as individual hotfixes.
A test version of this update is now available to businesses that wish to test the impact of the upcoming time zone changes. A copy of the update can be downloaded from the Microsoft Download Center. For more information please refer to Knowledge Base article 926666. Please note that by the time that the final update is released to the public, Exchange Server 2003 SP1 will have passed the end of support date and will not receive the update. Find more information about support policy lifecycles.
If you are running Exchange 2000 or Exchange 5.5 and are under an Extended Hotfix Support Agreement or Custom Support Agreement, please contact your Technical Account Manager for more information.
For Microsoft Windows SharePoint Services 2.0, Microsoft will release a single global time zone update which will include changes for the United States and Canada DST change. This update will be made available on January 9, 2007 via the Microsoft Download Center and released through Microsoft Update on January 23, 2007. To ensure your SharePoint timestamps and calendars are correct; apply the update between January 9, 2007 and March 10, 2007.
Windows operating systems
| • |
2007 time zone update for Microsoft Windows operating systems (928388) |
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How to configure daylight saving time for the United States in 2007 (914387) |
Other Microsoft products
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A test version of the 2007 daylight saving time update for Exchange Server 2003 is available (926666) |
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How to configure daylight saving time for the United States and Canada in 2007 and in subsequent years on Windows CE-based devices (923027) |
| • |
Changes to daylight-saving time in 2007 for Microsoft Dynamics CRM (925874) |
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FIX: U.S. daylight saving time changes in 2007 do not occur on the correct day on Windows CE 5.0-based devices (921095) |
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How to configure daylight saving time for the United States and Canada in 2007 and in subsequent years on Windows Mobile-based devices (923953) |
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FIX: The Windows CE .NET 4.0-based device does not correctly adjust the clock for daylight saving time (922347) |