A destructive windstorm disrupted the power supply to more than a dozen atomic clocks that keep official time in the United ...
10don MSN
A storm knocked US time off by 4.8 microseconds: How a windstorm briefly messed with America’s clock
Time is that one constant we all share across the world; it's the same everywhere on Earth, ticking forward at the exact same ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Brutal 125 mph gusts triggered rare power failure at US atomic clock facility
A severe windstorm in Colorado triggered a power failure at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), ...
Officials said the error is likely too minute for the general public to clock it, but it could affect applications such as critical infrastructure, telecommunications and GPS signals.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology’s Internet Time Service Facility in Boulder lost power Wednesday afternoon ...
Morning Overview on MSN
NIST: Internet time may be wrong after power outage hit servers
For a brief window this month, the official clocks that quietly coordinate the Internet’s heartbeat slipped out of sync. After a power outage hit key servers in Colorado, the National Institute of ...
Thanks to Einstein’s relativity, time flows differently on Mars than on Earth. NIST scientists have now nailed down the ...
Art school student Freddie Yauner's CO2-powered Highest Popping Toaster in the World concept is great and all (it's even supposedly Guinness World Record-certified), but a clock that aims to tell time ...
Due to the power outage, time (very) briefly stood still at the NIST Internet Time Service facility in Boulder.
Time synchronisation is critically important for decentralised systems in industrial automation, such as those found in chemical processing, printing presses, nuclear power plants, or any real-time ...
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