Mind. Blown.
Printable View
From Wikipedia:
By this definition maintenance ended an hourQuote:
Originally Posted by Wikipedia
before prime timeafter prime time started (eastern time).
An American on a Chinese server hosting a Japanese game in Canada.:rolleyes:
Aside from that, I agree with Dreamer. "Prime time" has a very strict definition used by most media companies; it isn't a loose synonym for "peak hours", though of course it caters to that notion.
Prime time is going to be anywhere from 5PM to 10PM, give or take. Children come home between 2PM and 5PM, many adults get off between 5PM and 6PM. A lot of people with (potentially) nothing to do for a few (or more) hours.
Hmm, only ONE data sample qualifies your research being conclusive?!?!
How about going back a few more?
Sep. 3, 5:00 p.m. to Sep. 4, 2013 3:00 a.m. (PDT) (8pm-6am EDT)
Sep. 11, 5:00 p.m. to Sep. 12, 2013 3:00 a.m. (PDT) (8pm-6am EDT)
Sep. 19, 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. (PDT) (7pm-9pm EDT)
Considering 3 out of 4 the "scheduled" ones were during the hours where it does fall in between the hours where people are home during late afternoon, early and late evening, yeah, so far most of the "scheduled" maintenance is during prime time when the NA population is most likely to log on.
BTW, where do you live? Maybe we can ask SE to schedule it during the hours you are most available to play instead of NA's.
EDIT:
While this excuse was acceptable during beta, this is no longer an acceptable excuse for a product that is live 24x7 serving the globe. Major data centers are operational and manned 24x7, hence the service provider also needs to be sensitive to the locale of their service area.
jc
Prime time is defined by two things:
Largest population density, hardware location.
For NA/EU, that more than likely means prime time is related to EST.