I said:

>> Civil timekeeping is a worldwide system.

Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:

> No it is not.

It is remarkable how the most aggressive responses to my posts are when I 
mention "system engineering" or "best practices" or otherwise suggest that this 
is fundamentally an exercise in proper system design.

> Nobody can prevent your government or my government from defining local time 
> as UTC + Xh 31 minutes + 41.5 seconds.

Sounds like a good argument for a coherent international process, not for 
tossing the UTC baby to the dingos.

> UTC is not civil time anywhere,

I understand that you wish to assert that local time == civil time.  But you 
also assert that computer networks worldwide must be synchronized.  Is this 
latter somehow not a civil function?

        Local time is layered on UTC

The former deals with local foibles.  The latter with global standards.  One of 
those standards is the synodic day.  UTC is layered on TAI, which introduces a 
separate global standard, the SI-second.

The three layers work together.  If we're to entertain remodeling the 
underlying architecture on a fundamental scale then system engineering best 
practices are the tools to do this.

Rob

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