it's about time!

Former Member
Former Member
One of the very last posts of 2001 was from me on New Year's Eve. I don't remember whether the title was mine or the administrator who decided that it was a sub topic of something remotely connected with the subject that I was proposing. But, no matter. Since the change of format this week to the new system, I don't know how to check it out or whether or not it makes any difference. However, after two weeks of no response of any kind and since it was my prerogative, being my birthday, the rare one that is divisable by both sevenses and elevenses, I went back to the subject to give it a boost, hoping that someone would give it some kind of notice. But, alas... With Ground Hog's (or is it s'?) Day looming around the next corner I'm very much determined to thrust the subject forward a third time in the hope that it will get some serious attention. And it is about time whatever way you choose to take the title. I don't remember everything I wrote the first two times but I'll simply make the proposal without any but the barest essential elaboration. As soon as possible post all swimming times in seconds only! Eliminate the use of minutes, or hours entirely. Having just yesterday having competed in the National Championship Event, The Hour Swim, (a Mail-in Event) I could consent to keeping the title. But for all listing and taking of times it would be 100% beneficial to use seconds only. The only reason to oppose the notion that I can think of would be related to the existing hardware. But transpositions would be easily done until the mass of the hardware is ready to conform on its own. My guess being that the computer timing systems would need only a nudge to adapt. Sprinters, of course, wouldn't understand what I'm talking about. But all swimmers who have a use for splits in their calculations run into stumbling blocks, not to mention common errors, that are bound to creep in whenever minutes become part of the results. I have one other helpful suggestion to make on the subject, and because of the opportunity, why not... If Splits, for example, of a 200 or a 1500 were listed in reverse order, it would be infinitely easier and more instructive to see their value and significance.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    ALLRIGHT!! Like, youse're gonna make me show my hand that has both a digital, I mean decimal, time system all ready to go which starts by dividing the day, not into 24 hours, but only ten each, before and after the sun reaches its meridian, which most of us can see on most days if we look. That would divide the day, from meridian to meridian, into 2000 minutes rather than the 1440 under the present system. Seconds would be 200,000 instead of 86,400. And, like, didn't I say a "both" in the first sentence? Meaning I had another system up my sleeve. This I call a Metric System (of musical pitch) which would be very useful in music and related sciences. Here the A's on the piano would relate to 400 instead of 440 although the sound would be the same, and its octaves downward would be 200, 100, 50, and 25 ( the lowest on the piano as we know it). As they are, they are 440, 220, 110, 55, and 27.5 cycles per second, as we used to say. This would allow mere mortals to make harmonic calculations "in the head". But that doesn't have much of a place in a swimming context, so I'll spare you any more (we Hoosiers usually say it as "anymore"). But enuf already.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    ALLRIGHT!! Like, youse're gonna make me show my hand that has both a digital, I mean decimal, time system all ready to go which starts by dividing the day, not into 24 hours, but only ten each, before and after the sun reaches its meridian, which most of us can see on most days if we look. That would divide the day, from meridian to meridian, into 2000 minutes rather than the 1440 under the present system. Seconds would be 200,000 instead of 86,400. And, like, didn't I say a "both" in the first sentence? Meaning I had another system up my sleeve. This I call a Metric System (of musical pitch) which would be very useful in music and related sciences. Here the A's on the piano would relate to 400 instead of 440 although the sound would be the same, and its octaves downward would be 200, 100, 50, and 25 ( the lowest on the piano as we know it). As they are, they are 440, 220, 110, 55, and 27.5 cycles per second, as we used to say. This would allow mere mortals to make harmonic calculations "in the head". But that doesn't have much of a place in a swimming context, so I'll spare you any more (we Hoosiers usually say it as "anymore"). But enuf already.
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