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F-ckin Leap Seconds, how do they work?
- Subject: F-ckin Leap Seconds, how do they work?
- From: mysidia at gmail.com (Jimmy Hess)
- Date: Wed, 4 Jul 2012 22:39:17 -0500
- In-reply-to: <CAP-guGUV5g1PGBz=OJFsDX=Wt=q93uf14W-qt+z21Zmq7AQGDg@mail.gmail.com>
- References: <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <CAP-guGUV5g1PGBz=OJFsDX=Wt=q93uf14W-qt+z21Zmq7AQGDg@mail.gmail.com>
On 7/4/12, William Herrin <bill at herrin.us> wrote:
> IMO, leap seconds are a really bad idea. Let the vanishingly few
> people who care about a precision match against the solar day keep
> track of the deviation from clock time and let everybody else have a
> *simple* clock year after year. When the deviation increases to an
> hour every what, thousand years? Then you can do a big, well
> publicized correction where everybody is paying attention to making it
> work instead of being caught by surprise.
[snip]
Instead of having leap seconds; redraw the world timezone map, so
that the boundaries of every time zone are shifted by a distance in
feet that corresponds to one second; and such that after a thousand
years and an hour's worth of leap seconds,
the physical locations of the timezones will have shifted just so
far, that there is a 1 hour adjustment. :)
--
-JH