Personally I'd like to see the UTC timescale be fixed to the TAI timescale
with a fixed offset determined by whatever the offset is when they make the
change.

Or stated as a different solution with the same result:  quit
adding/removing seconds from the TAI to UTC offset.

At the same time, those that rely on UTC being closely related to the
historical astronomical meaning of time being related to the rotation of
the earth can either move to UT1 (which is in theory more accurate for this
purpose), or continue the procedure that is currently used by UTC to create
a newly named timescale.

On Wed, Aug 3, 2022, 8:20 AM Stephane Bortzmeyer <bortzme...@nic.fr> wrote:

> On Wed, Aug 03, 2022 at 11:09:25AM -0400,
>  Jay Ashworth <j...@baylink.com> wrote
>  a message of 32 lines which said:
>
> > General press loses its *mind*:
>
> Indeed, they seem not to know what they write about. "atomic time –
> the universal way time is measured on Earth – may have to change" They
> don't even know the difference between TAI and UTC.
>
>

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