Not at all John my patience isn't tried learned a bunch, looked up TAI, new 
acronym for me.
Thank you

Sent from my iPad
Scott Ford
Senior Systems Engineer
www.identityforge.com



On Feb 29, 2012, at 6:52 PM, John Gilmore <[email protected]> wrote:

> Paul Gilmartin wrote:
> 
> | By the way, the embolismic day in bissextile years
> | is February 24, the sixth day before the kalends of March.
> 
> Yes and no.  In some medieval versions of what we call the Julian
> calendar---It was then called the Roman calendar---February 24th was
> duplicated;  there were two of them cheek by jowl in leap years; and
> it was not the first February 24th but the the second of them that was
> the 'embolismic' day.  (The Julian leap-year test is the simple one,
> mod(y,4) = 0.  There is no 2nd-order mod(y,400) = 0 for centurial
> years.)
> 
> Leap seconds are, among those of us who concern ourselves with these
> issues, extracalendrical, for the reasons I set out.  The NIST feed,
> which I too have observed, has neither facilities nor time to do
> things right by inserting, say,  'extracalendrical leap second' into
> is text.
> 
> We began on topic, but I think we have already tried the patience of
> some, and this is my last post in this thread.
> 
> John Gilmore, Ashland, MA 01721 - USA
> 
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