I’ve made a variation on my GPS clock that uses the new Pi Zero W (in truth, it 
could use an ordinary Pi Zero with some other network connectivity. The W’s 
built-in WiFi just simplifies things a bit) to drive the same LED display. The 
local time would ostensibly be synced by NTP in the usual manner (or whatever 
manner you like) and a daemon simply writes the time to the display. When I 
film the prototype in 240 fps slow motion, I see the tenth-of-a-second digit 
change within a frame of a GPS clock, so it’s at least an order of magnitude 
more accurate than its granularity, which is certainly good enough for a 
timepiece for humans.

I did it because sometimes it’s easier to get WiFi than GPS, and the Pi 
solution was a lot easier than microcontroller alternatives, while still being 
around the same cost and with sufficient accuracy.

https://hackaday.io/project/20156-raspberry-pi-zero-w-desk-clock
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