What time is it... Really?


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Many of you will soon be adjusting your clocks either one hour ahead or one hour back, depending on your location. And I am yet again reminded that no one really knows for sure what year it is.

Arguably the majority of the world recognizes it as the year 2,010 (2010). But this is completely based on the religious belief on when a single "religious being" lived & died. rolleyes.gif But this of course take out of count, the many years before this "believed" being lived or died.

Upon further reflection GMT (Greenwich Mean Time, established since 1884) has been replaced with UTC (Coordinated Universal Time, established since 1972). And it is worth noting that this UTC is based partly with UT (Universal Time), to which there are arguably 6 version of (UT1, UT0, UT1R, UT2, UT2R, UTC).

On top of all this... Not every county in the world adjust their clocks back & forth. Some keep a continued time all year around.

To make up for this lost time, we of course have added the idea of a "leap year" in which every 4 years we add an extra day. But if you do the math, that "leap year" does not fully account for every last second & as time continues to add... Those seconds become minutes, hours, days.... And of course, what about all the years before the calender included a "leap year"....

So what time is it? blink.gif

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Does it really matters what time it really is, or in what year are we on? Life goes on, without any hitch on my side.

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Let's have some fun then

According to Judaism the year is 5771

The Christian calendar says it's 2010

And the Muslim calendar says it's 1431 AH

hmmmm, who to believe

I bet just about every major religion has it as a different year, this can be fun :)

*edit*

According to the Hindus it's 3102 BCE

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I do software devt for an airline. The schedules are set in local time relative to each airport. Daily operational data are kept in UTC. Dispatchers can flip their displays between local and Zulu as needed. Before .NET 3.5 I had to code all the timezone translations manually. 3.5 introduced the TimeZone class which provided the necessary TZ conversions, but it still lacks a fully TZ-aware DateTime class. I had to write a custom class for that, to encapsulate the conversions and provide code for elapsed time calculations. Major PITA!

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Arguably the majority of the world recognizes it as the year 2,010 (2010). But this is completely based on the religious belief on when a single "religious being" lived & died. rolleyes.gif But this of course take out of count, the many years before this "believed" being lived or died.

Actually, most historians today use C.E. (Common Era) and B.C.E (Before Common Era) for dates. These dates actually aren't based on Jesus birth, since he was actually born (using 'pivotal' dates, that is, dates attested to and confirmed from both Biblical and secular sources) in 2 B.C.E.

Using B.C. ('Before Christ') and A.D. (Anno Domini, Latin for 'Year of the Lord') are really not used anymore since they really aren't historically accurate. As far as Leap Years are concerned, there are other safetys imposed to keep run away leap years from messing us up. If you'll remember, 2000 was a leap year, but 1900 wasn't. Why? Because only years beginning centuries that are equally divisible by 4 are made leap years.

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the only real number should be when the Earth was created, and not when Humans decided to keep count

or since the Big Bang, as Humans are not the center of everything

so about 20GY ( or 80GY )

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you forgot the dinosaurs age, time didnt started with the birth of jesus, dalai lama, velociraptors, or even when the earth was created.

The most correct answer for the time in our universe is year 13.7 billion... but then again we have einstein theory of relativity, so the time we live in this planet is different of the time we live when flying on a plane.

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That's one mighty question to ask . Better yet , it bakes another question : as a quantifying unit , was its measure constant during human existence ?

Which time is accurate ? :whistle:

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