Martin Burnicki wrote: > Hi all, > > I've got the feeling that some clarification is required on drift > values. > > Let's have a look at an example: > > Say you have some wristwatches and you want to check whether they are > accurate, or not. On the television there is a clock displayed > whenever a news programme is broadcasted. You trust that clock and > see that one wristwatch goes ahead by 1 minute every day, another one > by 20 seconds, and a 3rd one by just one second. [] > Martin
Martin, I feel this is quite a good analogy. (Although, with some British TV stations timekeeping is very bad: (a) they no longer broadcast either the time pips or a clock showing the time, (b) there is a processing delay of a few frames in analog TV due to image processing and (c) the delay in digital TV means it is several seconds behind analog TV.) You don't normally expect the drift on your watch to change unless you do something stupid like drop it onto concrete, so if the news was off time one day, in the first instance you might like to believe your watch rather than the TV - the football had overrun it's time! However, if the news gets further and further off time over a period of a few days, then perhaps it's your watch and not the TV station which is wrong! [Your own leap-second results are most impressive, thanks for posting them.] Cheers, David _______________________________________________ questions mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ntp.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/questions
