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- Date: Tue, 14 Jan 86 12:04:40 est
- >From: seismo!cbpavo.cbosgd.ATT.UUCP!mark@sally.UTEXAS.EDU (Mark Horton)
-
- In the context of standardizing the handling of time zones for UNIX,
- the question has arisen: is a timezone offset in minutes good enough,
- or does someone need to be able to say "We're at 2 hours, 14 minutes,
- and 23 seconds east of GMT"?
-
- I've noticed that most places in the world are on standard
- time, and the offsets are either whole hours or half hours.
- However, I understand that Saudi Arabia is on "solar time",
- which I take it means that the time zone is based on the
- exact position of the sun for each town. I also understand
- that there may be other countries that don't use standard time.
-
- I'd appreciate a note from anyone who is familiar with the time
- zone customs of such countries. What I'd like to know is:
-
- (1) Are offsets always to the nearest minute, or are they sometimes
- done to the nearest second?
-
- (2) Are any means taken to compensate for the fact that the Sun is
- sometimes up to 8 minutes fast or slow? That is, does the clock run
- faster or slower at certain times of the year?
-
- (3) How accurate are times? In official places (such as telephone
- companies, airports) that make real use of clocks, are clocks expected
- to be correct right down to the second, or are errors of a minute or
- so typical? (Even in the USA, people's wristwatches and wall clocks
- are usually off by a few minutes, but computers can now synchronize
- their clocks to WWV.)
-
- (4) How important is the accuracy of the time? Is it a major religious
- ritual to have the time accurate down to the millisecond, or does somebody
- just set the clock from a sundial and hope it's within 10 minutes?
-
- Thanks in advance for replies. I'll summarize later to mod.std.unix.
-
- Mark Horton
-
- Volume-Number: Volume 5, Number 19
-
-