The one I checked (1944) was a scan of an old paper copy. It was readable,
but far from good.
Downloads may be very slow. From watching my modem lights, it looks like
somebody is dropping packets.
--
These are my opinions, not necessarily my employer's. I hate spam.
In fact the servers are off line or something.
Would be great to have the journals online.
On Sun, Oct 24, 2010 at 2:08 AM, Hal Murray hmurray@megapathdsl.net wrote:
The one I checked (1944) was a scan of an old paper copy. It was readable,
but far from good.
Downloads may be very slow. From watching my modem lights, it looks like
somebody is dropping packets.
--
These are my opinions, not necessarily my employer's. I hate spam.
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to
https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
Time-Nuts,
New members to the Time-Nuts list may wonder if the Time-Nut disease
has infected them just by joining the list. A clear indication that
someone has been infected with the Time-Nut disease is they own a
reference that provides accurate time to better than 1us and
frequency to better than 1e-9. This is a mild form of the disease,
but as the infection progresses multiple standards appear, each
having greater accuracy than the last. Analysis of the number of
standards owned and their relative accuracy during this stage will
give an indication of the severity of the infection. This stage of
the disease can continue for many years, slowly draining the persons
time and money at an ever increasing rate, as the infected party
attempts to improve the time and frequency accuracy of their
standards and be able to prove with greater certainty accuracy they
have achieved.
In the later stages of the disease the patient will have at least
three standards with a frequency accuracy of 1e-12 and a time
accuracy of 1ns and be performing 3-corner hat analysis on them.
They will also be examining at least one other standard that exceeds
these accuracy levels. They will own specialized test equipment
such as a Dual Mixer Time Difference Multiplier for testing other
devices against their existing standards. Severe forms of the malady
will cause the patient to strive for less than 1ps time accuracy and
less than 1e-15 frequency accuracy even though they have no real use
for standards with this level of accuracy. They will begin justifying
increasingly large expenditures for even better standards and test
equipment just to be able to test what they already have with no
other purpose in mind. The disease will continue to progress until
ultimately all of the patients personal time and money are
exhausted or they die. Unfortunately there is no known cure for
the Time-Nut disease, although it can be managed by applying a
strictly controlled budget to the patientÂ’s purchases during the
early stages of the disease.
Richard
P.S. This was written for enjoyment and should not be taken
seriously as an indication of a true medical condition.
On Oct 24, 2010, at 1:44 PM, Richard H McCorkle wrote:
The disease will continue to progress until
ultimately all of the patients personal time and money are
exhausted or they die.
One can only hope that the local coroner is also a Time-Nut, so that time of death can be determined with suitable accuracy and precision. Does anybody know how many bits of precision are used on tombstones these days?
--
Mark J. Blair, NF6X nf6x@nf6x.net
Web page: http://www.nf6x.net/
GnuPG public key available from my web page.
In message 53601812-FC62-4098-9266-55EDF50AFB2C@nf6x.net, "Mark J. Blair" wri
tes:
Does anybody know how many bits of precision are used
on tombstones these days?
Most tombstones are engraved with CNC machines and while I have yet
to see a company advertise it as a competitive parameter, your vital
lack of stats will be engraved with better than 1/50mm precision.
On one picture I saw at cnczone.com they used approx 10 different
diamondcrusted bits.
Estimating bitcounts we find:
X-axis ~30k [60cm / 1/50mm]
Y-axis ~30k [60cm / 1/50mm]
Z-axis ~5k [10cm / 1/50mm]
Toolholder ~10 [visual estimate]
-----------------------------------------
Total ~65k bits
:-)
--
Poul-Henning Kamp | UNIX since Zilog Zeus 3.20
phk@FreeBSD.ORG | TCP/IP since RFC 956
FreeBSD committer | BSD since 4.3-tahoe
Never attribute to malice what can adequately be explained by incompetence.
On Oct 24, 2010, at 1:58 PM, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
In message 53601812-FC62-4098-9266-55EDF50AFB2C@nf6x.net, "Mark J. Blair" wri
tes:
Does anybody know how many bits of precision are used
on tombstones these days?
Most tombstones are engraved with CNC machines and while I have yet
to see a company advertise it as a competitive parameter, your vital
lack of stats will be engraved with better than 1/50mm precision.
Oh, I was mostly concerned with the bits of precision used for the birth and death timestamps.
--
Mark J. Blair, NF6X nf6x@nf6x.net
Web page: http://www.nf6x.net/
GnuPG public key available from my web page.
On 10/24/2010 10:50 PM, Mark J. Blair wrote:
On Oct 24, 2010, at 1:44 PM, Richard H McCorkle wrote:
The disease will continue to progress until
ultimately all of the patients personal time and money are
exhausted or they die.
One can only hope that the local coroner is also a Time-Nut, so that time of death can be determined with suitable accuracy and precision. Does anybody know how many bits of precision are used on tombstones these days?
The true report would not be correct without a traceability certificate
and confidence interval for the TOD indication, motivated by the
measurement inaccurancies and established TDEV measures.
Naturally the next of kin doesn't really care, as they now can dump all
the junk collected in the basement. The real mourning of the deceased
from fellow time-nuts comes when they realize just how much of precious
gear has been lost forever.
Cheers,
Magnus
On Oct 24, 2010, at 2:03 PM, Magnus Danielson wrote:
The real mourning of the deceased from fellow time-nuts comes when they realize just how much of precious gear has been lost forever.
Of course, we would like to know precisely when the precious gear was lost.
--
Mark J. Blair, NF6X nf6x@nf6x.net
Web page: http://www.nf6x.net/
GnuPG public key available from my web page.
Hey,
at least it's better than my other hobby. If they try to dump my collection of geiger counters and radioactive samples its likely to set of radiation alrams at the dump and result in a big bill for the clean-up ;-)
Robert G8RPI.
--- On Sun, 24/10/10, Magnus Danielson magnus@rubidium.dyndns.org wrote:
From: Magnus Danielson magnus@rubidium.dyndns.org
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Determining Time-Nut infection severity.
To: time-nuts@febo.com
Date: Sunday, 24 October, 2010, 22:03
On 10/24/2010 10:50 PM, Mark J. Blair wrote:
On Oct 24, 2010, at 1:44 PM, Richard H McCorkle wrote:
The disease will continue to progress until
ultimately all of the patients personal time and money are
exhausted or they die.
One can only hope that the local coroner is also a Time-Nut, so that time of death can be determined with suitable accuracy and precision. Does anybody know how many bits of precision are used on tombstones these days?
The true report would not be correct without a traceability certificate and confidence interval for the TOD indication, motivated by the measurement inaccurancies and established TDEV measures.
Naturally the next of kin doesn't really care, as they now can dump all the junk collected in the basement. The real mourning of the deceased from fellow time-nuts comes when they realize just how much of precious gear has been lost forever.
Cheers,
Magnus
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.
Mark J. Blair wrote:
On Oct 24, 2010, at 1:58 PM, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
In message 53601812-FC62-4098-9266-55EDF50AFB2C@nf6x.net, "Mark J. Blair" wri
tes:
Does anybody know how many bits of precision are used
on tombstones these days?
Most tombstones are engraved with CNC machines and while I have yet
to see a company advertise it as a competitive parameter, your vital
lack of stats will be engraved with better than 1/50mm precision.
Oh, I was mostly concerned with the bits of precision used for the birth and death timestamps.
I should think that if you have left instructions with your executor,
they can have any arbitrary number of digits engraved, including an
estimate of uncertainty, if needed. You could even have them estimate
the Allan deviation of the various clocks involved, and have the
requisitite plots engraved as well.