It's about time

Digital watches. I've never really got on with them. I mean, it's all well and good telling me that the time is '13:03' or whatever, but before I can make any sense of that I first have to parse it into something more human, like 'just turned one.' This is why I've always got on better with analogue watches -- I just don't need to know the time that accurately.

It's a source of mild irritation, then, that my various computers all dutifully scurry off to talk to an atomic clock in Germany on a (presumably) regular basis, and smugly present little digital clocks that are accurate to tiny divisions of time than I personally consider to be entirely decent only within the confines of a physics laboratory. While such profligate accuracy may not be, strictly, wasteful, I do consider it... impolite.

For years, what I've wanted is a clock that can know the time as accurately as it likes -- to the femtosecond if it wishes, I really don't care -- so long as it tells me the time on my terms. That is: vaguely. I want a digital clock that says 'About noon.' Or 'just on quarter-to-three.' Or 'Time for elevenses.'

Imagine my joy, then, when I stumbled over FuzzyClock, which offers precisely this for the menu bar of my Mac. Hurrah!

Also of significance: the Talus Watch project, which is aiming to do essentially the same thing, but in a genuine wrist watch. Fantastic!

Tip of the hat to Martin and Gizmodo for the spot.

Categories

Monthly Archives

Pages

OpenID accepted here Learn more about OpenID
Powered by Movable Type 4.32-en

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Jonathan published on February 2, 2006 6:17 PM.

Lucky | Good was the previous entry in this blog.

Quick links is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.