Re: Filling in a struct timespec with the current date?
Re: Filling in a struct timespec with the current date?
- Subject: Re: Filling in a struct timespec with the current date?
- From: Eli Bach <email@hidden>
- Date: Tue, 28 Jul 2009 23:20:35 -0700
On Jul 28, 2009, at 10:06 PM, Esteban Bodigami wrote:
1 kilosec = 1 day
1 kilosec != 1000 sec
...which is weird... you may think that you just multiply the
seconds to
minutes and then to hours and finally to days... but NO!
one day has never had 24 hours (1440)... it is like 24 hours + 1
minute
(1500), because of many astronomical cycles that were never taken into
account when the 365 Gregorian Calendar was invented.
for simplicity we have also the "megasec", which will be 1 year, and
the
"zetasec" which is 1 galactic year (the Mayan Calendar in this way is
superior; they knew about the galactic year which equals 26,000
years).
btw, for conversion of time i don't use "seconds" i use "units of
time"...
which are related to pixies (COLORS and LIGHT); because people
cann't see
either nano-pixies nor zeta-pixies (they are part of what has being
proved
by science to be outside of the range of human visible light)... one
"light-second" is 300k -1m; but 1 unit of time = 3z units of lenght
(almost
meters).
the time zone is irrelevant, it is UTC +0
I am fine with the epoch being 1970, because if you -40 there is
1930 (Great
Depresion) and if you +40 there is 2010 (next year, 2 years before
the 13th
baktun and the year 2555 of the Buddhist Era... there will be a year
2600
B.E. btw =)
Esteban,
I have to say, your reply to my attempt to help you has put the final
nail in the coffin.
The units you describe don't show up in the first couple of pages of
google results, and from the sound of them, seem to have been defined
by you for your own personal needs. It is entirely unrealistic to
assume anybody can help if you don't realize this.
And from your earlier posts, you clearly are very enthusiastic about
working with computers. However, you also come across as being very
inexperienced with programming them. So the ideas and concepts you
present either don't make sense or are considered very unrealistic by
the people on this list, which by it's nature has a bunch of
programmers/engineers that have a lot of experience in programming in
general, and the design and programming of unix systems in particular.
I would suggest that you need to spend a bunch of time reading the
archives (past messages) for mailing lists to get a sense of what is
appropriate to post and what kind of assistance the list can/will
provide before you post again.
However, I will no longer respond to your posts, as your ideas
relating to computing, units and life are way beyond my ability to
comprehend.
Eli
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