[LEAPSECS] happy anniversary pips
Richard Clark
rclark at noao.edu
Wed Feb 12 18:53:06 EST 2014
Back in the 1974 oil crisis the US made an 'emergency' change to its
DST schedual. I don't recall the legal mechanism used. It was likely
an executive order from the President.
But it most definitely was with less than 6 months notice so the legal
precedent is exists in the US.
I also have noticed that 'critical security patches', to which linux is
less prone than some operating systems, often require action in less than 6
months from the time issued.
Richard Clark
rclark at noao.edu
On Wed, 12 Feb 2014, Hal Murray wrote:
>
>> E) Leap seconds are tied to observations of the earth's spin, rather than
>> predicted years in advance. With only 6 months warning for leap seconds,
>> this produces operational difficulties for many environments that have
>> burdensome change control policies.
>
> What do those organizations do when Congress changes the DST rules?
>
> Do they work on UTC/GMT so they can ignore DST? They must have to interact
> with the rest of the world occasionally.
>
> How much notice did people get the last time Congress changed the DST rules?
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