On Feb 11, 2014, at 9:31 AM, Tony Finch <d...@dotat.at> wrote:

> Warner Losh <i...@bsdimp.com> wrote:
>> 
>> Perhaps, but leap seconds are a solution to the problem that must die in
>> the fullness of time. With the quadratic acceleration there will come a
>> time in a few thousand years when one leap second a month or day isn't
>> enough and another solution will be necessary to keep things in sync. So
>> in a way, leap seconds are putting a band-aide over the problem until
>> everybody alive today is dead too...
> 
> Yes. And time zone adjustments will be able to keep civil time in sync
> with earth rotation for a much longer time than leap seconds :-)

Nonsense!  However expressed the embargoed leap seconds accumulate at exactly 
the same rate during any particular epoch, and the long term tidal trend will 
present the same challenge.

Also nonsense to suggest that there is any urgency whatsoever since the current 
UTC standard is practical for many centuries even without expanding beyond 
December and June.  This is a manufactured crisis.

That said, the fact that we're all still here 15 years later suggests 
significant community interest in working on civil timekeeping issues and 
infrastructure in general.  How much further along we would be if we hadn't 
just spent those 15 years attempting to quash the naive and dangerous ITU 
proposal being pushed by special interests.

Rob

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