• Re: Yes, the old definition of second is winning against SI idiocy

    From Tim =?iso-8859-1?q?Tak=E1cs?=@21:1/5 to All on Sat May 3 22:35:33 2025
    XPost: sci.physics.relativity

    Maciej Woźniak wrote:

    On 5/3/2025 11:10 PM, Vidal Kachanovsky wrote:
    Maciej Woźniak wrote:

    On 5/3/2025 9:04 PM, Anil Movsarov Dikarevsky wrote:
    Maciej Woźniak wrote:

    On 4/10/2025 10:41 PM, Paul.B.Andersen wrote:

    > GPS clocks are adjusted down by (1 - 4.4647e-10)
    > so the adjusted clock will measure a mean solar day to last
    > 86400 s,
    > and the clock will stay in sync with UTC.

    That's right - the clocks made for serious measurements are adjusted >>>>> (calibrated) to count seconds of 1/86400 of a mean solar day. See,
    poor idiots - common sense has been warning you.

    impossible.

    Yet that's what is happening. Common sense has been warning you.

    why are you deleting the proof, you stupid khazar goy. You cant divide
    anything without an agreed standard unit or entity.

    But "agrreed standard unit" is not the idiocy physics is trying to
    enforce. Common sense has been warning you.

    that's not the point. You don't have that thing yet, to agree with about
    and consent later on. That's the difference between math and physics. In physics you cant divide shit like that, without having both things present
    and clarified.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From =?UTF-8?Q?Maciej_Wo=C5=BAniak?=@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 4 07:38:52 2025
    XPost: sci.physics.relativity

    On 5/4/2025 12:35 AM, Tim Takács wrote:
    Maciej Woźniak wrote:

    On 5/3/2025 11:10 PM, Vidal Kachanovsky wrote:
    Maciej Woźniak wrote:

    On 5/3/2025 9:04 PM, Anil Movsarov Dikarevsky wrote:
    Maciej Woźniak wrote:

    On 4/10/2025 10:41 PM, Paul.B.Andersen wrote:

    > GPS clocks are adjusted down by (1 - 4.4647e-10)
    > so the adjusted clock will measure a mean solar day to last
    > 86400 s,
    > and the clock will stay in sync with UTC.

    That's right - the clocks made for serious measurements are adjusted >>>>>> (calibrated) to count seconds of 1/86400 of a mean solar day. See, >>>>>> poor idiots - common sense has been warning you.

    impossible.

    Yet that's what is happening. Common sense has been warning you.

    why are you deleting the proof, you stupid khazar goy. You cant divide
    anything without an agreed standard unit or entity.

    But "agrreed standard unit" is not the idiocy physics is trying to
    enforce. Common sense has been warning you.

    that's not the point.


    Yes, that's the point.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Kiefer Babanoff@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 4 10:00:06 2025
    XPost: sci.physics.relativity

    Maciej Woźniak wrote:

    On 5/4/2025 12:35 AM, Tim Takács wrote:
    Maciej Woźniak wrote:
    On 5/3/2025 11:10 PM, Vidal Kachanovsky wrote:
    Maciej Woźniak wrote:
    On 5/3/2025 9:04 PM, Anil Movsarov Dikarevsky wrote:
    Maciej Woźniak wrote:
    On 4/10/2025 10:41 PM, Paul.B.Andersen wrote:
    > GPS clocks are adjusted down by (1 - 4.4647e-10)
    > so the adjusted clock will measure a mean solar day to last >>>>>>> > 86400 s, and the clock will stay in sync with UTC.
    That's right - the clocks made for serious measurements are
    adjusted (calibrated) to count seconds of 1/86400 of a mean solar >>>>>>> day. See, poor idiots - common sense has been warning you.

    impossible.

    Yet that's what is happening. Common sense has been warning you.

    why are you deleting the proof, you stupid khazar goy. You cant
    divide anything without an agreed standard unit or entity.

    But "agrreed standard unit" is not the idiocy physics is trying to
    enforce. Common sense has been warning you.

    that's not the point.

    Yes, that's the point.

    okay, jew. I give you a 'solar_day' the way you want it, and nothing else.
    Come back with your second, in duration of a second. Fucking idiot.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)