Antonio I8IOV wrote: >I wrote: >>Well the best reason is that by our social convention it makes people
>comfortable. >> >>But that reason does have much logic behind it. >One month ago a 38-year old wristwatch resurfaced from a junk box and I >decided to return to it at least temporarily. It drifts some 30 seconds per >day, but sincerely I don't feel any particular discomfort with it. Obviously I meant to say that it "doesn't" have much logic, not that it "does" have much logic. Clearly for tens of thousands of years we had no more precision than daily sunrise for timekeeping, so the world won't vanish if we don't have accurate clocks. I myself have a few mechanical watches, and I no longer wear a wrist watch since I seem to be surrounded by clocks all the time. Every computer screen in my sight has the TOD in the corner. My cell phone has the TOD. There's a clock on the wall in almost every room I walk in at work and at home. But our social convention has changed over time, and now we expect to know the time precision closer than sunrise/sunset can tell us. Personally, +/- a minute or two is good enough for most everything I do in my life. But frequency is important to me. Michael / KA7ZNZ _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.
