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- WOW! BATMAN'S OWN NAVAL OBSERVATORY!
-
-
-
- Robin: HOLY TIMEPIECE, BATMAN! Your own Naval
- Observatory!
-
- Batman: That's right, Robin. TIMEGEN, the Time Generator from
- Life Sciences Editorial Services, lets any computer transmit
- time signals in Naval Observatory format so people can
- dial it on their modems with TIMESET (ver. 5.0) to get
- accurate time for their own computers.
-
- Robin: WOW! That sounds like fun!
-
- Batman: Well, it is fun and easy to use, Robin, but it's a serious
- program. Organizations with far-flung stations, including
- several right here in the Gotham City area, have a need
- to synchronize all their computer clocks. This includes
- police and other government agencies, banks (who want
- to make every penny of "float" income they can off your
- deposit right up to the last millisecond before they have
- to start honoring any checks you might want to write on
- it), utilities, communication firms, and many other
- organizations with branch offices.
-
- This highly accurate program makes it unnecessary for all
- the computers in a system to call the Naval Observatory.
- Only a central computer needs to do it with TIMESET.
- TIMEGEN can then be set up to turn that accurately set
- computer into a "bulletin board" specializing in Naval
- Observatory-style time signals. You can set it up to run
- continuously on a dedicated computer with automatic
- corrections for clock drift every few hours from the Naval
- Observatory itself, or only for certain periods of the day.
- The program can be configured to generate Universal
- Time signals from local computer time in any time zone
- in the world.
-
- After the central computer's clock has been set accurately
- by calling the real Naval Observatory with TIMESET
- version 5, TIMEGEN lets local computer users synchronize
- to it by modem with their own copies of TIMESET
- version 5. All they have to do is configure their own
- copies of TIMESET to dial TIMEGEN instead of the
- Naval Observatory. That not only reduces the burden on
- a vital public service, it can save an awful lot in long
- distance phone bills.
-
- Robin: HOLY BUSINESS EXPENSES! But I'll bet the program
- costs a lot.
-
- Batman: Well, Robin, TIMEGEN is not in the public domain, it's
- copyrighted, and it's not free. The man who developed it
- worked very hard to make it a sophisticated, attractive,
- highly dependable, and easy to use timesetting program,
- and he would like to be compensated for his effort. There
- is a shareware price tag, but it's modest -- only $25.
-
- Robin: Seems reasonable to me, especially for people who use the
- program for money-making purposes or have access to
- appropriations. I mean, bankers don't give away money,
- do they? They rent it out at high fees. Electric
- companies don't give away electricity. They charge an arm
- and a leg for it and they keep asking for more and more
- money every year. And governments pay for guns, cars,
- radars, highway cameras, and two-way radios for their
- police. They don't ask businesses to donate those things.
- Scientific instrument companies don't give instruments to
- scientists, no matter what worthy things they are doing in
- their labs. The scientists pay for them out of their grants
- or institutional funds. And the Defense Department
- doesn't get its toilet seats free from the Salvation Army.
- It pays $600 apiece for them, and it thinks nothing of
- paying $20-$40 for a diode that can be had for 49 cents
- at Radio Shack. WOW! What's 25 bucks to people like
- that?
-
- Batman: That's right, Robin. I don't mind paying $25 for this fine
- program even though I have no appropriations and don't
- even get tax deductions for pursuing villains like The
- Joker. God knows I've tried to get tax deductions for our
- work, but the damned IRS keeps saying, "Sorry, Mr.
- Batman. Unless you and Mr. Robin can show an income
- from your pursuit of criminals, you can't deduct the cost
- of it." I hear that every time I'm called in for an audit,
- which is annually. Sometimes I feel my crime fighting
- efforts aren't appreciated at all by those bureaucrats.
-
- Robin: HOLY WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE! All this
- time I thought you were just a rich dude looking for tax
- loopholes, buying an expensive custom-built car like the
- Batmobile and fine tailormade capes, masks, and leotards
- for us so you could get a writeoff! Speaking of The Joker,
- isn't it about time for our nightly pursuit of that
- scoundrel?
-
- Batman: Right. But first let's load TIMEGEN on the Batcomputer
- so it can dial the Naval Observatory for the exact time,
- then be ready to transmit accurate time signals to us while
- we're going after The Joker. I've installed TIMESET
- version 5 in the Batmobile's own computer so we can stay
- synchronized by car phone with the Batcomputer here.
- Split-second timing is essential when you're pursuing a
- clever fiend like The Joker. Incidentally, TIMESET and
- TIMEGEN were written by the same man, so we can be
- sure the two programs are mutually compatible.
-
- Robin: HOLY COINCIDENCE! You mean both programs were
- written by Pete Petrakis, the science writer who is owner
- and founder of Life Sciences Editorial Services, Annapolis,
- Maryland and gets more and more involved in computer
- programming with each passing year?
-
- Batman: He's the one.
-
- Robin: WOW! Did you send him his shareware registration fee?
-
- Batman: I thought you'd never ask. I sent him the money
- yesterday, for both TIMESET version 5 and TIMEGEN.
- TIMEGEN can't work without Professional TIMESET
- anyway, so I figured I'd take care of both at the same
- time.
-
- Robin: HOLY INTEGRITY! You're OK, Batman!
-
- Batman: Well, Robin, would you expect anything less of a champion
- of honor, virtue, decency, and the American Way?
-
- Robin: WOW!
-