Tony Finch wrote:

> Are there any requirements for mean solar time other than astronomy and 
> celectial navigation?

Has anybody associated with the ITU crusade looked?  Failing to look is not 
equivalent to performing a careful inventory.

Astronomy is not just a quirky avocation (that happens to deal with the most 
fundamental questions of all), but a commercial enterprise.  Have the various 
makers of professional and amateur telescopes and software been contacted?  Of 
planetaria?  Of sundials for that matter?

There are requirements and then there are mere statements of fact.  The 
calendar counts days.  The clock divides them up.  "Day" is a concept tied to 
the sun.

Navigation is an activity critical to the world economy.  The assumption 
appears to be that GPS has completely and utterly replaced all else.  Is this 
true?  What about back-up systems?  What about implicit assumptions buried in 
the architecture of the manifold systems on, say, airliners and cargo ships?  
UTC has been an approximation to UT since its inception.  Universal Time as a 
concept is explicitly derived from Greenwich Mean Time.  Perhaps there are no 
UTC gotchas hidden in the millions of lines of code and vast numbers of 
procedures comprising the modern world's many transportation systems.  
Shouldn't somebody look before we redefine a basic component of the system?

Several of us here were deeply involved in our organization's and community's 
Y2K remediation activities.  Nothing similar has occurred related to this 
naive, unnecessary, and unimaginative campaign.  The risks are unknown.  
Claiming there aren't any risks because you can't think of any off the top of 
your head is woefully reckless.

Rob


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