From: Harlan Stenn Our resident cryptographer; now you see him, now you don't. Last update:
- 05-Oct-2011 15:25
+ 29-Nov-2012 16:40
UTC Last update:
- 04-Aug-2011 1:37
+ 29-Nov-2012 16:42
UTC
from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll
Related Links
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Copyright Notice
"Clone me," says Dolly sheepishly.
from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll
Caterpillar knows all the error codes, which is more than most of us do.
Last update: - 04-Oct-2011 21:20 + 29-Nov-2012 16:40 UTC
Author: David L. Mills (mills@udel.edu)
Last update:
- 18-Oct-2010 20:51
+ 29-Nov-2012 16:51
UTC
Last update: - 31-May-2012 20:56 + 29-Nov-2012 16:43 UTC
About every eighteen months the International Earth Rotation Service (IERS) issues a bulletin announcing the insertion of a leap second in the Universal Coordinated Time (UTC) timescale. Ordinarily, this happens at the end of the last day of June or December; but, in principle, it could happen at the end of any month. While these bulletins are available on the Internet at www.iers.org, advance notice of leap seconds is also available in signals broadcast from national time and frequency stations, in GPS signals and in telephone modem services. Many, but not all, reference clocks recognize these signals and many, but not all, drivers for them can decode the signals and set the leap bits in the timecode accordingly. This means that many, but not all, primary servers can pass on these bits in the NTP packet heard to dependent secondary servers and clients. Secondary servers can pass these bits to their dependents and so on throughout the NTP subnet.
diff --git a/html/miscopt.html b/html/miscopt.html index ad0c379ef..b07831040 100644 --- a/html/miscopt.html +++ b/html/miscopt.html @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@
from Pogo, Walt Kelly
We have three, now looking for more.
Last update: - 01-Nov-2011 00:44 + 29-Nov-2012 16:43 UTC
from The Wizard of Oz, L. Frank Baum
You need help from the monkeys.
Last update: - 21-Dec-2010 13:51 + 29-Nov-2012 16:44 UTC
from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll
I told you it was eyeball and wristwatch.
Last update: - 04-Sep-2010 1:24 + 29-Nov-2012 16:45 UTC
from Pogo, Walt Kelly
A typical NTP monitoring packet
Last update: - 20-May-2011 20:04 + 29-Nov-2012 16:46 UTC
from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll
The rabbit knows the way back.
Last update: - 04-Sep-2010 14:51 + 29-Nov-2012 16:47 UTC
Last update: - 12-Sep-2010 3:54 + 29-Nov-2012 16:48 UTC
FAX test image for SATNET (1979).
The baby panda was scanned at University College London and used as a FAX test image for a demonstration of the DARPA Atlantic SATNET Program and the first transatlantic Internet connection in 1978. The computing system used for that demonstration was called the Fuzzball. As it happened, this was also the first Internet multimedia presentation and the first to use a predecessor of NTP in regular operation. The image was widely copied and used for testing purpose throughout much of the 1980s.
Last update: - 12-sep-10 3:54 + 29-nov-12 16:48 UTC