Sirs:
This precisely is my *theme & contributions* of attepting to tie 24hx100mdx100sd with arcAngle ONE degree (Pi/180)x100 arcMinute x100arcSecond 'keeping the 90-degree quadrant & 360-degree circle'. Calendar Reform that I talk can be with or without the use of Leap Days/Leap Weeks using 294 VG Years - each of 364 days (293-yrs/3624 lunation) by shifting July 31 to February 29 during ALL years; and keeping December 31 OUTSIDE of calendar format as World Day or 1.242189669781 day make up for Leap Day/Week accounting, as per my LEAP accounting.Civil time ("time of day") is measured in non-SI units that are sothoroughly (but debatably) ingrained into society that even the powers of SI have agreed that hours and minutes (and even days and years) are acceptable "for use WITH the SI". > ======================== > > SIMPLIFICATION begins with SI > > ========================
Regards, Brij Bhushan Vij (Saturday, Kali 5106-W39-06)/D-016(Monday, 2006 January 16H13:23(decimal) ET Aa Nau Bhadra Kritvo Yantu Vishwatah -Rg Veda Jan:31; Feb:29; Mar:31; Apr:30; May:31; Jun:30 Jul:30; Aug:31; Sep:30; Oct:31; Nov:30; Dec:30 (365th day of Year is World Day) ******As per Kali V-GRhymeCalendar****** 2108 Henry Court, MAHWAH NJ 07430 (USA) Telephone: +001(201)684-0191
From: Linus Peter Sweers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]> CC: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]> Subject: [USMA:35700] Re: decimal time Date: Mon, 16 Jan 2006 09:43:39 -0800 Ten hour days do ot work well with time zones at all. Look at it as a 24 hr day with a decimalized minute. On Sun, 2006-01-15 at 00:38 -0500, Bill Hooper wrote: > On 2006 Jan 14 , at 2:46 PM, Paul Trusten, R.Ph. wrote: > > We've talked about decimal time > > > > here (a 10-hour day, etc.) > > > > In SI, time is already decimal; it is measured in seconds, > kiloseconds, milliseconds, etc. > > > Civil time ("time of day") is measured in non-SI units that are so > thoroughly (but debatably) ingrained into society that even the powers > of SI have agreed that hours and minutes (and even days and years) are > acceptable "for use WITH the SI". > > > So, anyone who wishes to change the number of hours in a day, minutes > in an hour or seconds in a minute may do so as much as they please > without any effect on SI (PROVIDED that the size of the second is not > changed). If you like, go to it. > > > Any such plan has to recognize that there > are 86 400 seconds (or 86.4 ks) in a day and whatever scheme one could > devise must accommodate that fact. It is impractical in the extreme to > consider changing the length of the second, and it is impossible (with > foreseeable technology) to change the length of the day (the rotation > of the Earth). > > > It may be, that for measuring civil time, the minute and hour are no > worse than any other possible arrangement. > > > > > Regards, > > Bill Hooper > > Fernandina Beach, Florida, USA > > ======================== > > SIMPLIFICATION begins with SI > > ======================== > > >
