On 12 Jan, 2014, at 15:42 , Greg Hennessy <[email protected]> wrote: > On 01/12/2014 02:47 AM, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote: >> In message <[email protected]>, Brooks Harris writes: >> >> >>> Yes, in my opinion its unfortunate they chose to use the term "UTC" in >>> that context. >> >> They chose UTC because they meant UTC. >> >> I have this directly from multiple persons who were involved back >> then, including Dennis Ritchie who gave me the full sordid details >> about the early UNIX' requirement of weekly recompiles to update >> the epoch of the timekeeping. > > > If they chose UTC because they meant UTC, then why do the > man pages refer not to UTC, but to GMT? > > http://cm.bell-labs.com/7thEdMan/vol1/man2.bun > > It sounds like you are rewriting history.
I don't think the fact that they called it "GMT" at that point tells you anything since referring to UTC as "GMT" was pretty common in the US at the time. Even the NBS did it. WWV voice announcements referred to the time being transmitted as GMT from when they stopped announcing MST until 1974 even though the time was very definitely UTC by then (including the DUT1 advertisements). This site https://soundcloud.com/shortwavemusic/sets/at-the-tone-a-little-history/ has a recording of the last announcement calling it GMT and the first calling it UTC; it sounds like DUT1 was 0.3 seconds. The previous recording is the announcement of the change and indicates that the time they'd been calling GMT was in fact UTC. If the NBS's radio service was calling UTC "GMT" then it shouldn't be surprising that computer programmer contemporaries might do that too. The note that goes along with the recording says that they made the change because of CCIR complaints. Dennis Ferguson _______________________________________________ LEAPSECS mailing list [email protected] http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/leapsecs
