Re: [time-nuts] Simon Winchester: The Perfectionists

2018-05-08 Thread William H. Fite
Bravo, bravo, bravo! On several occasions I have pointed out that there is
more to time-nuttery than striving to achieve an Allen deviation measured
in zeptoseconds. The silence in response is always deafening. If I want to
struggle with phase angles of billionths of a degree, I can go down to my
basement Chamber of Horrors and do that. But I can also sit in my den and
listen to all my mechanical clocks fighting over who strikes the hour
first. I revel in the cacophony of Westminster, St. Michaels, Whittington,
Rochester, Magdalen, Parsifal chimes all sounding at once, sorting them out
in my head, savoring the dissonances. I dote on the barometric drive of an
Atmos, the twirling of an el cheapo quartz filament clock, the squawking of
a cuckoo, and the constant clatter of a Congreve

I have a cesium clock, rubidium, GPS, etc. in the Chamber and I love
tinkering with them but I will never put a quartz watch on my wrist or an
"atomic" clock, even a 60 cycle synchronous clock on my wall.

Different strokes, I suppose.

Bill


Westminster Quarters, Rochester Quarters, Magdalen Chimes, Parisfal Chimes,
Guildford Chimes

On Tuesday, May 8, 2018, Hal Murray  wrote:

> In 'The Perfectionists' Simon Winchester Looks At History Of Precision
> Engineering
>
> https://www.npr.org/2018/05/07/608590826/in-the-
> perfectionists-simon-wincheste
> r-looks-at-history-of-precision-engineering
>
> KELLY: You write about that in such a personal way in the book. You
> include
> the detail of your Sunday morning ritual, of walking room to room in this
> old
> farmhouse you live in and correcting all the clocks, you know, pushing one
> hand forward a little bit and another hand back, and that you love the
> inaccuracy of that, that they're all chiming totally out of sync by midway
> through the next week.
>
> WINCHESTER: Yes, a lovely description in Dorothy L. Sayers' book "Gaudy
> Night" about the clocks in Oxford chiming midnight in friendly
> disagreement.
> Well, I like clocks having friendly disagreement. I loathe digital watches
> with, I mean, the one I dare say you're looking at in the studio now, with
> microsecond countdowns. Let's take it a bit easier. Let's be a bit fuzzy
> in
> our needs and desires and wishes.
>
> ---
>
> I don't know if the book discusses time.  If you aren't familiar with his
> work, he's good.
>
>
>
> --
> These are my opinions.  I hate spam.
>
>
>
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Re: [time-nuts] Simon Winchester: The Perfectionists

2018-05-08 Thread Poul-Henning Kamp

In message <20180508073640.64e72406...@ip-64-139-1-69.sjc.megapath.net>, Hal Mu
rray writes:

>about the clocks in Oxford chiming midnight in friendly disagreement. 

Terry Prachett has a lovely description of how the clocks of Ank-Morpork
chimes in "Men At Arms":

Noon in Ankh-Morpork took some time, since twelve o'clock
was established by consensus. Generally, the first bell to
start was that one in the Teachers’ Guild, in response to
the universal prayers of its members. Then the water clock
on the Temple of Small Gods would trigger the big bronze
gong. The black bell in the Temple o Fate struck once,
unexpectedly, but by then the silver pedal-driven carillon
in the Fools’ Guild would be tinkling, the gongs, bells and
chimes of all the guilds and temples would be in full swing,
and it was impossible to tell them apart, except for the
tongueless and magical octiron bell of Old Tom in the Unseen
University clock tower, whose twelve measured silences
temporarily overruled the din.

-- 
Poul-Henning Kamp   | UNIX since Zilog Zeus 3.20
p...@freebsd.org | TCP/IP since RFC 956
FreeBSD committer   | BSD since 4.3-tahoe
Never attribute to malice what can adequately be explained by incompetence.
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[time-nuts] Simon Winchester: The Perfectionists

2018-05-08 Thread Hal Murray
In 'The Perfectionists' Simon Winchester Looks At History Of Precision 
Engineering

https://www.npr.org/2018/05/07/608590826/in-the-perfectionists-simon-wincheste
r-looks-at-history-of-precision-engineering

KELLY: You write about that in such a personal way in the book. You include 
the detail of your Sunday morning ritual, of walking room to room in this old 
farmhouse you live in and correcting all the clocks, you know, pushing one 
hand forward a little bit and another hand back, and that you love the 
inaccuracy of that, that they're all chiming totally out of sync by midway 
through the next week.

WINCHESTER: Yes, a lovely description in Dorothy L. Sayers' book "Gaudy 
Night" about the clocks in Oxford chiming midnight in friendly disagreement. 
Well, I like clocks having friendly disagreement. I loathe digital watches 
with, I mean, the one I dare say you're looking at in the studio now, with 
microsecond countdowns. Let's take it a bit easier. Let's be a bit fuzzy in 
our needs and desires and wishes.

---

I don't know if the book discusses time.  If you aren't familiar with his 
work, he's good.



-- 
These are my opinions.  I hate spam.



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