> You'll need a faster car. Or a plane. Maybe we could get the guys on the 
> space station to try it?

Hi Brooks,

On the equator, timezones fly by about 1000 mph (earth diameter is ~25000 
miles, day is ~24 hours). So that excludes cars and commercial planes.

Even up here at 45 degrees latitude, timezones fly by about 700 mph 
(approximately the speed of sound). Still too fast for cars and private jets.

Your best bet is to contact someone in the arctic or antarctic and have them 
experience all 24 Azure leap seconds during the day of June 30, 2015. You 
perhaps have seen cool timezone photos from Amundsen-Scott.

I say this only partly in jest. It would make a fine blog entry for someone to 
pull this off. Not only would it be another dramatic refutation of ancient flat 
earth theories but it would also nicely demonstrate the increasing disparity 
between the needs of medieval astronomy, interstate railroads, and modern 
computing and timekeeping.

The guys at Google, Amazon, and Microsoft are only trying to solve real 
problems and best serve their customers. They are not stupid. The official ITU 
or the glossy DHS guidelines for leap seconds don't help them. So when they 
decide to smear or jump time in 2015 instead of implementing a 1960's solution 
you need to sit up and listen.

/tvb

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