Honestly it’s pretty frustrating......well it is for me anyway.
I admit I’m a bit anal about having my watch and clocks as near to the second as I can get.
I’ll list some of them....BBC TV, SKY on screen display, Vodaphone, Sky speaking clock, BBC Radio pips, various commercial radio stations too many to mention, my Apple iPad, Microsoft, airport terminal clocks, train stations and finally Big Ben.....I even have one of those clocks that automatically gets the signal from somewhere in Germany (forget what they’re called) and adjusts itself. The list goes on and on!
The problem is they ALL seem to have slightly different times.....if you don’t believe me and have the mind to, check it out, you’ll be amazed.
No doubt many of you don’t give a shyte......but for some reason it irritates me that this should be the case......sometimes it’s as much as 10 to15 seconds or so, depending on the organisation involved!
Who on earth can you believe these days......or am I just wasting everyone’s time!
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I don't want to change it as I'm so used to it I might miss something
I use it to set all my watches and it's linked to the atomic clock. I'm a bit OCD when it comes to accuracy and the second hand must be spot on and the minute hand must also hit the marker dead on as well.
But then again I've never really considered it.
I am now.
Damn you to hell
Imagine how annoying it is having to see that every time you look at it.
Might I suggest that there are now so many sources who will proudly tell you it’s the exact time that one cannot be categorically sure.
Ask Oggy Red. he's been living in the past for years.
I much prefer driving a BMW where every other road user respects me completely. The clock is accurate as well!!
Time drift is a massive problem in IT - synchronisation with a reliable internet time source is extremely important. There are a number of time servers publicly accessible on the internet - many run by the military and synchronised to atomic clocks. Every network I've ever been responsible for running has an authoritative time source (in a Windows environment, usually the primary domain controller emulator or - back in the NT days - the 'actual' primary domain controller, but sometimes a dedicated time server) - this is synced with a local public time source, and becomes the authoritative source for time in the network
I had a cracking problem a few years back whereby the time source I was synced with unexpectedly shit the bed and briefly (less than a minute) showed a time & date of 1st Jan 1970 (UNIX time). Unfortunately, the authoritative source for the domain happened to sync during that period, and we had huge problems as a result - took a good while to figure out what had caused them
Reading that back has caused me to come to two conclusions:
1 - time is very important
2 - I'm a fucking nerd