At 07:37 AM 7/16/2005, Robert Lutwak wrote...
>Personally, I'd like to eliminate timezones and daylight savings, as well as 
>leapseconds.  Why is it so important that everyone on the planet clock in at 8 
>a.m. or that we all have dinner at 6 p.m. ?

That's a short term view. Eliminate the leap second, and we'll clock in at 1 
a.m. in the year 4500.

_All_ uses of civil time expect it to be synchronous with astronomical time, to 
varying degrees of precision. An absence of leap (seconds) will eventually 
cause it to be dark at noon, unadjusted use of the current formula for leap 
days will eventually shift the seasons. That's unavoidable and unacceptable.

The proper solution is the one which can accommodate the differences between 
our ability to accurately measure time intervals and the fact that our 
fundamental basis of time measurement (astronomical positions) is not long-term 
stable. Leap periods for day and year are simply unavoidable, so we'd best 
learn to accommodate them. Be thankful lunar months aren't expected to be 
accommodated.

Eliminating leap seconds only creates a long term problem to provide short term 
convenience. It is not a logically consistent solution. It will not make the 
real issue go away.

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