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POLITICA ARGENTINA/INTERNACIONAL: FRANCE TO ADOPT METRIC TIME PRESIDENT MACRON CLOCK ARC DE TRIOMPHE PARIS
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Réponse  Message 1 de 11 de ce thème 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999  (message original) Envoyé: 29/03/2025 17:41

France to adopt Metric Time

First metric clocks go up in nation's capital

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About-France.com - the connoisseur's guide to France
Paris April 1st.  2022 - AFC

      France will officially become the first country in the world in modern time to adopt metric time, according to a surprise announcement made yesterday evening on national television news, and confirmed by a spokesman for President Macron. 
Arc de Trimmphe
Municipal employees have already begun putting up metric clocks at key Paris locations, such as at the Arc de Triomphe  
The change to metric time will complete the process of metrication launched over two centuries ago in the wake of the French Revolution.  Subject to official confirmation, M-Day is scheduled for April 2023, leaving French businesses, transport operators and the general public just a year to prepare for the event.
   Even as the news was going out on national television in France, the wraps were being removed from the first metric clocks already covertly installed at key tourist locations in Paris by a team from the city hall.  "We need the world to see that France is still a revolutionary country !" said mayor Annie Dalgo, who is also the Socialist Party's candidate in the upcoming French presidential elections.

      Critics have reacted swiftly to news of the plan, claiming that the switchover to metric time will lead to panic and confusion on a par with the Millennium bug, and should not be introduced in a hurry; but in Paris a senior member of the official National Time Metrication Coordinating and Organising Committee, the CNOCTM, confirmed that the change to metric time has now been approved by France's highest arbiter, the Constitutional Council.
       Under the plans first put forward in 1791 by Alphonse Touta-Leurre, a Corsican watchmaker who rose to prominence in Parisian scientific circles in revolutionary France, days in France will be subdivided as from next year into ten metric hours, and each hour divided into one hundred metric minutes. However plans to name these units Meurs and Centimeurs have been shelved in spite of the possibility of confusion following the changeover. A secret poll carried out by Paris-based Ipsos suggested that changing the names of the units as well as the units themselves would lead to even greater confusion.

      A memorandum on preparing for the changeover will be circulated in the coming month to all local authorities and the directors of all public institutions in France. It requires clockfaces on all public buildings, and  timepieces in all public services to be prepared for the changeover by February 1st next year at the latest. Clock faces on historic monuments are however exempt from the changeover, and will continue to show 24-hour time as part of France's national heritage. A research team at the ENSMM digital micromechanics school at the university in Besançon, France's historic watchmaking capital, is believed to have perfected a patch to update the software of most digital clocks and watches manufactured since 2005, except for those made in China.
      Commenting on the changeover, which for over a year has been the subject of secret negotiations between leading French industry chiefs and the directors of major public services, a senior executive of the French rail service SNCF said: "We are quite confident that we will be fully prepared for this historic change in which France will lead the world.  This is a very positive step forward, and as far as the railways are concerned, people will feel that the trains are faster, even if this is not the case. For example, from April 1st next year, the TGV (high speed train) service between Paris and Lyon will take under an hour, compared to two hours with the present system."
     But questioned on a late-night French TV show,  a spokesman for Air France, who had no prior knowledge of the project, expressed considerable alarm. "I do not think that this is a very sensible plan. Ooh la la. But imagine the confusion we will have in the skies over France. Unless everyone adopts this new metric time,  we will have planes leaving from Frankfurt at 8 o'clock in the morning, and reaching Paris at 4 o'clock in the morning the same day. It will be crazy!  No no no, I cannot believe that France will do this alone. "
      Contacted by P Geest, a correspondent for French television news channel LCI,  European Commission Weights and Measures Directorate spokesman Hengst Driyfødder suggested that Brussels may block moves by France to take a unilateral decision of this nature. " I don't think that France will be able to take such an important decision without EU approval, " he observed. "It might be better to postpone the changeover for a year or two, so that all countries in the European Union can move over to metric time together. Maybe on April 1st 2024."

The change in brief :  with a day divided into ten, not twenty-four, hours, and an hour made up of 100 minutes ...
6 a.m. becomes  2.50,   9.30 a.m will be 3.96,  Midday will be 5.00,  6 p.m. will be 7.50.  and so on.    


And if you're still incredulous about this.... the idea is not as strange as it might seem, and France did actually use metric time, or decimal time, for two years in the Revolutionary period, from 1793 to 1795; the day was divided in to ten hours, and each hour into 100 minutes. The system was scrapped  in 1795 when France introduced the Republican calendar, which was used until 1806. This calendar divided the year into twelve months (years started with the Autumnal equinox), and each month was divided into three decades. The months had names derived from the farming calendar or from the weather, and included Vendémiaire, Brumaire, Floreal and  Thermidor. .
https://about-france.com/metric-time-2022.htm


Premier  Précédent  2 à 11 de 11  Suivant   Dernier  
Réponse  Message 2 de 11 de ce thème 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Envoyé: 29/03/2025 17:48

Metric Time

Aside from you chronically late people, we all know how time works:

20150416093225_00001

This system is okay. But also, it’s kind of crazy.

Why 60 minutes per hour? Why 60 seconds per minute? It goes back to Babylon, with their base 60 number system—the same heritage that gives us 360 degrees in a circle. Now, that’s all well and good for Babylon 5 fans, but our society isn’t base-60. It’s base-10. Shouldn’t our system of measuring time reflect that?

So ring the bells, beat the drums, and summon the presidential candidates to “weigh in,” because I hereby give you… metric time.

20150416093225_00002

Now, this represents a bit of a change. The new seconds are a bit shorter. The new minutes are a bit longer. And the new hours are quite different—nearly two and a half times as long.

20150416093225_00003

So why do this? Because it’d be so much easier to talk about time!

Here’s one improvement: analog clocks are easier to read. At first glance, the improvement may not be so obvious—we’ve simply reshuffled the numbers a bit.

20150416093225_00004

But notice, the minute hand makes more sense now. When it’s at the 2, we’re 20 minutes past the hour. When it’s at the 7, we’re 70 minutes after the hour. And so on.

20150416093225_00005

Second, times are no longer duplicated. For example, instead of needing to distinguish between 6am and 6pm, we can simply say “2:50” and “7:50.” (This is, of course, how “military time” currently works.)

Third—this is a big one—the time tells you how far through the day you are. The time 2:00 is exactly 20% of the way through the day. At 8:76, we’re exactly 87.6% of the way through the day.

20150416093225_00006

Fourth, consider the moment when we’re 99.9% of the way through the day. In the new metric system, we get to watch the clock roll from 9:99 back around to 0:00. Isn’t that nicer and more conclusive than 11:59pm rolling around to 12:00am?

Fifth, it’s so much easier to talk about longer times. Two and a half days? That’s 25 hours. Three days and 6 hours? That’s simply 3.6 days. Since an hour is now a nice decimal fraction of a day, these conversions become easy.

Will there be adjustments to make? Certainly! But the adjustments are half of the fun.

Let’s start, as all good things do, with television. Whether you enjoy half-hour sitcoms or hour-long dramas, the length of your favorite shows is probably going to change. Why? Because, under our new system, what we now call “half an hour” will be 20.83 minutes. What we now call “an hour” will be 41.67.

20150416093225_00007

There’s nothing magical about these “half-hour” and “hour” lengths, obviously. They were chosen simply because they were nice round numbers. But under the new system, they aren’t! Since it’d be silly to divide the TV schedule into 21-minute intervals, presumably television networks would tweak the lengths to go more evenly into an hour.

If so, they’d have two choices: 5 blocks per hour (i.e., two dramas, plus a sitcom), or 4 blocks per hour (i.e., two dramas).

If you choose the former, shows will be 4% shorter than today, leading to accelerated storytelling. (It’s the same change that’s unfolded over the last 20 years, as increased ad time has squeezed the shows themselves to be shorter.)

20150416093225_00008

And if you choose the latter, shows will be 20% longer. They’ll perhaps unfold at a slower, more cinematic speed. Either way, expect the pacing and rhythm of TV shows to change.

Sports run into the same issue. Football will probably opt for four quarters of 10 minutes each, which shortens the game by 4%. Expect slightly diminished scoring as a result. (And, if we’re lucky, diminished concussions.)

20150416093225_00009

Hockey, meanwhile, might go for three periods of 15 minutes each, which actually makes the game 8% longer. It might give someone a chance to tackle Wayne Gretzky’s scoring records (but then again, probably not—he’s way out of reach right now).

20150416093225_00010

I’d expect soccer to select two halves of 30 minutes each, which (as with American football) shortens games by 4%. If you thought soccer was too high-scoring already, you’re in luck (and also in a very small minority, I suspect).

20150416093225_00011

When it comes to sports, the lengths of games won’t be the only thing changing. We also need to reconsider record running times.

Usain Bolt’s world-record for the 100-meter dash (currently 9.58 seconds) would be, under the new system, 11.09 metric seconds. Doing the 100m in 11 metric seconds might be achievable in the future, but 10 seconds? Perhaps never. (That’s the equivalent of 8.64 of our seconds!)

What about the mile? Well, it’s a little funny to imagine a world with metric time still worrying about that strange unit of distance (5280 feet? Really?), but the famed 4-minute mile would correspond to a 2.78-minute mile.

This is weird because, for top runners in the 1940s and 1950s, the barrier to running a 4-minute mile may have been less physiological than psychological. Would the 2.8-minute mile have felt as intimidating? Would the 3-minute mile? Perhaps it’d be the 2.5-minute mile, seeing as the current world record (3:43 in our old system) is 2.58 metric minutes?

20150416093225_00012

And we might as well mention the marathon, where the world record time (currently 2:02:57) is now under an hour: 85 minutes, 38 seconds. I suspect that the 1-hour marathon would be a real badge of honor, something that every distance runner aspires to.

Leaving sports aside, what about food?

Restaurants would open for breakfast at perhaps 3:00 or 3:50. (Of course, coffee shops like Starbucks might open as early as 2:50.)

You’d get lunch around 5:00—that is to say, noon. Under our current system, I feel silly eating before 11:30, which is 4:80 under the new system. But I wonder—would I feel comfortable grabbing lunch at 4:75? Perhaps even 4:60 (even though that’s earlier than 11am under our current scheme)?

20150416093225_00013

Eating is psychological, and how we number our hours might steer our behavior.

As for dinner, I suspect 7:50 to 8:00 would be the preferred time (although the famously late-eating Spaniards might hold off until 8:75 or 9:00).

Other numbers change, too. Take speed limits: the typical 65mph limit on many highways translates to 156 mph under the new system; I suspect we’d see that bumped up to 160 mph or down to 150 mph for the sake of roundness (which translates to 66.7mph or 62.5mph under our current system).

20150416093225_00014

The speed of sound? Not 340 meters per second any longer; it’s now just 294 meters per second. Meters haven’t changed, of course, but seconds have gotten shorter!

And the speed of light? Unfortunately, we lose the lovely number 300 million meters per second; instead, it becomes roughly 260 million meters per second.

Speaking of light, on the equinox, you get 5 hours of light and 5 hours of dark.

The winter solstice is pretty grim: in London, you’d see just 3 hours, 25 minutes, and 25 seconds of daylight.

The summer solstice is nice, though: London would get 6 hours, 93 minutes of sun.

20150416093225_00015

Okay, time to come clean: I propose this without a single iota of seriousness. It’d be insane to ditch our current system. We’re used to it. We’ve agreed upon it. We’ve built our lives around it. The hassle of a change far outweighs the gains.

But I still love the thought experiment. It asks you, in some small way, to reimagine your life. How do you spend your time? How do you measure the success of a day? When you plan your hours, are you conceding to the arbitrary dictates of a quirky clock, or are you truly giving your tasks the time that they deserve? If I scrambled your sense of time, relabeling all your moments, would it change the way you feel about them? Do the numbers we assign to times matter? Or are we just scratching lines on the shifting dunes of eternity?

https://mathwithbaddrawings.com/2015/04/16/metric-time/

Réponse  Message 3 de 11 de ce thème 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Envoyé: 30/03/2025 16:27
Geometry of Time via the Metre, Egyptian Royal Cubit & the Great Pyramid -  YouTube
Evolution Vs Creationism What Do You Believe? - Page 28 - The Speak Easy
Commonwealth of Israel Foundation: TWO HOLY CITIES? - THE MEASUREMENTS  INDICATE OTHERWISE...ESPECIALLY "24"
The Egyptian Royal Cubit [Updated] | abzu2
Some interesting properties of pyramids: holofractal

Respuesta Ocultar Mensaje Eliminar Mensaje  Mensaje 31 de 39 en el tema 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 07/09/2021 20:34
Harmonics Great Pyramid Timing & Proportions - YouTube

Réponse  Message 4 de 11 de ce thème 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Envoyé: 30/03/2025 16:52
No hay ninguna descripción de la foto disponible.
 
The Egyptian Royal Cubit and the Foot are units of measure connected by the fraction 12/7 = 1.714285... (or 5/7 = .714285...)
The Hexagon is said to be the symbol of creation containing 7 points (middle and 6).
We naturally mark 12 points on a circle (time) by dividing 360 by 30.
When we consider 147 as the ancient egyptian sacred number it's no wonder that length was used as the original Royal Cubit length of the Sphinx or 252 feet. Some math:
252-147 = 105
147/105 = 1.4
252/105 = 2.4
 
 
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=616622461722982&id=159074557477777&set=a.410818145636749

Réponse  Message 5 de 11 de ce thème 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Envoyé: 30/03/2025 17:22

Réponse  Message 6 de 11 de ce thème 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Envoyé: 30/03/2025 18:07
Una de las primeras definiciones del metro lo describía como la diezmillonésima parte del arco de meridiano (la distancia del polo norte al ecuador), medida a lo largo del meridiano que pasa por París

Réponse  Message 7 de 11 de ce thème 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Envoyé: 30/03/2025 18:13
Una de las primeras definiciones del metro lo describía como la diezmillonésima parte del arco de meridiano (la distancia del polo norte al ecuador), medida a lo largo del meridiano que pasa por París

Réponse  Message 8 de 11 de ce thème 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Envoyé: 30/03/2025 18:20
Remember when France tried metric time

Réponse  Message 9 de 11 de ce thème 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Envoyé: 31/03/2025 04:33
Harmonics Great Pyramid Timing & Proportions - YouTube

Respuesta Ocultar Mensaje Eliminar Mensaje  Mensaje 47 de 59 en el tema 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 08/09/2021 20:47
Resultado de imagen para NEW JERUSALEN PHI
GEMATRIA ELLEN GOULD WHITE=666 - DESENMASCARANDO LAS FALSAS DOCTRINAS -  Gabitos
Resultado de imagen para PYRAMID MOON
Si todos los caminos llevan a Roma...

Réponse  Message 10 de 11 de ce thème 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Envoyé: 31/03/2025 04:41
Pin on Egypt

Réponse  Message 11 de 11 de ce thème 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Envoyé: 31/03/2025 14:46
student submitted image, transcription available below


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