TH Augsburg
NTP Service
The 'Time'
Swedish botanist Carl von Linné observed that flowers open and close
at certain times of day. In 1745 he proposed a flower clock to complement
the then used sundials. It would indicate the time with an accuracy of half
an hour, even when sky is overcast.
This dial was painted by Ursula Schleicher-Benz in 1948.
Links
The Time is a fascinating topic. Several people
in the Internet community publish documents about
definition, measurement and calculation of time.
Here are some entries to a wealth of information:
The term 'Time' requires explanation. The document
A Few Facts Concerning GMT, UT, and the RGO
by Richard B. Langley is a good
discussion of different terms of time.
There is a comprehensive 'note' (sheer understatement) about
The Science of Timekeeping,
written by three well reputated
physicists (David W. Allan, Neil Ashby, Clifford C. Hodge).
You may proceed with reading RFC-1305 by
David L. Mills,
the definition of NTP (avalaible in PostScript and pdf).
Visit the
International Earth Rotation Service
(IERS)
in Paris, France. The guys who keep the earth
rotating, you think? Not exactly. They make
the leap seconds we are all aware of. Not?
A Summary of the International Standard Date and Time Notation
by Markus Kuhn is worth reading not only for
formally predisposed persons.
The Time of Internet
by Fabrizio Pollastri lists
'Information and curios, news and notions,
Internet sites and services about time measurement'.
Not mentioned the omniscient
'Home of the Network Time Protocol'
yet? You already saw it.
Look at the home page for the book specified below.
It has a long list of links too.
Literature
If you are really interested in time and date
definitions and calculations, including holidays,
you should read this book:
Dershowitz, N. and E.M. Reingold:
Calendrical Calculations.
Cambridge University Press
Cambridge (UK) / New York / Melbourne
Fourth (Ultimate) edition, 2018
ISBN 0-521-56413-1 (hardcover) or
ISBN 0-521-56474-3 (paperback)
Calendrical Calculations.
Cambridge University Press
Cambridge (UK) / New York / Melbourne
Fourth (Ultimate) edition, 2018
ISBN 0-521-56413-1 (hardcover) or
ISBN 0-521-56474-3 (paperback)
Some of the calculations defined here
are used in the NTP daemon software.
You will find a comprehensive bibliography.
The authors had established a
home page (now in the Web Archive)
for the book to facilitate communication.
Software
There is a lot of software concerning Time
in the Internet, both freeware and shareware.
The book specified above has also several links
to software.
Besides the NTP daemon software the
'Home of the Network Time Protocol' maintains a
list of links
to many software sources.