On Feb 12, 2014, at 11:22 AM, Rob Seaman wrote: > Hi Warner, > > You’ll note that this particular email is addressed to you. Most > contributions to this mailing list are not personally addressed. In those > cases one might reasonably infer that other messages were intended as general > contributions to a common forum.
Yea. >> On Feb 12, 2014, at 9:09 AM, Rob Seaman wrote: >> >>> Meanwhile, whatever discussions occur on this list should flow from >>> documented case studies: >>> >>> >>> http://www.cacr.caltech.edu/futureofutc/preprints/files/2_AAS%2013-502_Allen.pdf >>> >>> Not untethered speculation. >> >> Untethered speculation? Sweet! I've never had my direct, personal >> experiences in a topic be called that before. > > As are many of those reading this, I’m fitting time for the forum into a > packed schedule of other activities. Since the list has been busy lately it > is hard to keep up with all the talking points. Some of these correspond to > things with which I disagree, but have no time to address. On more than one > occasion lately I have therefore chosen to reference the many previous > discussions on this list or its precursor, as well as the proceedings of the > two meetings we organized in 2011 and 2013 precisely to discuss these topics. Yea, I'd hoped to attend those, but they were held in locations the advance notice of the meeting precluded my attendance. > Assertions on a mailing list, not just yours alone, may be called untethered > if they don’t reference prior work, here and elsewhere. In particular, Steve > Allen’s paper is the most complete exploration of the topic in question, and > itself references a variety of resources well worth reviewing. I wasn't aware that we had to foot-note all the assertions made before they'd be held up to ridicule. they are unreferenced, not untethered. Untethered is rude and implies I'm full of some solid brown substance that typically doesn't smell good if a third party produced it.... Ask for references instead of being insulting. Geeze. > Many talking points here have indeed been speculative. Those who believe in > hiding the signature of the synodic day within a shell game of ever shifting > timezones could certainly arrange for prudent research to either demonstrate > or demolish such a scheme. Absent such studies the notion is speculation. It is more than just speculation. One can demonstrate that the error between local time and timezone time remains within the same error bars that we have today, as well as demonstrate the frequency of the shift needed. Perhaps that should be something i write up... > It is not speculation, however, to point out that this notion forms no part > of the actual ITU proposal, which is focused on redefining UTC to no longer > serve as Universal Time, not on the remedies for such action. Those who need > access to interval timescales already have such access. What the proposal > does, rather, is deny access to the current solar timescale, an issue not > directly related to the timezone system. One might therefore infer that the > entire discussion of timezones is a ploy to achieve a short term political > end, but that would be speculation. The old proposal I thought was totally dead. The notion there was to have a leap-hour in UTC, which we both agree is a crazy idea... Warner _______________________________________________ LEAPSECS mailing list [email protected] http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/leapsecs
