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[Discuss] Abolish DST (was This year's Beowulf Bash is not for the lily-livered)
- Subject: [Discuss] Abolish DST (was This year's Beowulf Bash is not for the lily-livered)
- From: bobleigh at twomeeps.com (Bob Leigh)
- Date: Tue, 23 Nov 2021 13:33:15 -0500
- In-reply-to: <20211123162916.GD4299@csail.mit.edu>
- References: <CAAbKA3X8_G0Ku4Gh9uqMM3Uya2KxxKkwUg-NmT49L5U0ER9X-w@mail.gmail.com> <1637542619062.7856@mit.edu> <CAAbKA3VD_621=YhCK-VAqT8d+_NyChtu_ZnRPpnv-BkP05ReqA@mail.gmail.com> <1637545901738.21232@mit.edu> <CA+h9Qs4_5CG977NtxF=C+EDahkGtAx6cSdOmc-Qxseons5gRoQ@mail.gmail.com> <20211122101515.3c892316.Richard.Pieri@gmail.com> <9c13d55b-c545-59e8-4cf1-8b1774fc5046@borg.org> <20211122114001.4c4d7a17.Richard.Pieri@gmail.com> <b0d670b6-cb1e-e08f-ec7e-cc4db93d7ecd@borg.org> <CAFv2jcZ3XwiBnE7N3J3Xhsy5-yMX1pcDZxZEN6NvZkFStW0Zsg@mail.gmail.com> <20211123162916.GD4299@csail.mit.edu>
One more comment related to "morning people":
I own a pair of calligraphy buttons:
Who the hell let the morning people run everything?
They were unanimously elected at a 7 a.m. meeting.
--
Bob bobleigh at twomeeps.com
On Tue, Nov 23, 2021 at 11:29 AM grg <grg-webvisible+blu at ai.mit.edu> wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 22, 2021 at 02:55:41 PM -0500, Kent Borg wrote:
> > Nope. Youngsters know time is simple and still write code that assumes
> > things are today as they were when I was born: a second is a fixed
> > fraction of a day.
> ...
> > Time is complicated.
>
> I couldn't agree more that time is complicated, but I don't agree that it's
> a matter of youthful or, shall we say, substantially experienced
> programmers. at any age, imho the only way to really appreciate the inane
> and esoteric vagaries of time is to either implement a time library or
> build an application where time critically matters, such as synchronizing
> worldwide communications or scheduling global airline flights.
>
> do either of those and you realize that everything about time, without
> exception, is just a construct of people and the agreement between them
> (spelled "politics", but in the broad sense). we sciency/engineeringish
> types think time is an absolute, scientific reality -- a second is exactly
> a second in any reference frame you're in, right? even if that were true
> (it's not), *everything* we ever say or compute about time is just an
> arbitrary human fabrication.
>
> across the globe, people don't agree on how long a year is, how long a day
> is, how long a second is (forget about "month!"), when a day/year/etc
> starts and ends, whether we use the sun, the moon, stars, atoms, or some
> combination of those as a reference (all of which we tweak as it pleases
> us). not to mention the most obvious, its variation by location - where
> the subject of the current argument (EST/EDT/AST/ADT/EPT...) is based not
> only on capricious applications of geographic and governmental boundaries,
> but even the fact that they're 1 hour apart is the product of someone's
> whimsy (and more whimsy means they're not even all 1 hour apart). tzone
> varies by dictum, years vary by decree, seconds vary by convention, and it
> all changes whenever a random neuron fires in someone with the ability to
> get other people to follow that neuron. (which means that rationalizing
> the past is yet an additional layer of annoyance...)
>
> and we're supposed to teach computers to deal with this garbage?? what a
> colossal waste of time (measured in which standard? ;) - even if necessary
> if we want computers to interact with these inconsistent and mercurial
> humans. (do I sound bitter about this? ;)
>
> everything about time is arbitrary and it changes all the time. forgive me
> if I can't get worked up about a 1-hr shift every half revolution or so.
>
>
> > (fuzzy) Google definition of the second. Mostly it is dang precise and
> > stable, but every year or so, it starts to slew wildly away from its
> > usual precise duration and then slew wildly back
> ...
> > I say fuzzy because I am pretty sure how and when the slewing happens is
> > not well defined, is probably not consistent from one leap second to the
> > next. And this odd time standard is distributed via NTP, which was not
> > intended to distribute a non-stable reference, so the result is going to
> > be a mess from any time-standardization perspective.
>
> fwiw, I think google's proposal is well defined & documented, and they make
> a reasonable argument that the change is well within ntp and commodity
> system clock tolerances ("11.6?ppm...within the manufacturing and thermal
> errors of most machines' quartz oscillators, and well under NTP's 500 ppm
> maximum slew rate"):
> https://developers.google.com/time/smear
>
> and don't blame google only, there were plenty of other made-up versions of
> this before google said "hey, let's all hack this smear thing the same way"
> (to which everyone else said "forget you, I thought of a different hack so
> whatever I made up is obviously superior").
>
> ok, so I guess I do get worked up about this stuff, just not about the dst
> part of it specifically. ;)
>
> --grg
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>
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