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Re: I prefer this kind of clock or watch:

by swampyankee (Parson)
on Jan 16, 2006 at 20:27 UTC ( [id://523586]=note: print w/replies, xml ) Need Help??


in reply to I prefer this kind of clock or watch:

I've yet to see a watch that moves its hands in a continuous, as opposed to jerky fashion, so I guess you can argue analogue watches don't really exist (except for those sundials, which tend to be less than portable).

I do, however, prefer the watches which do have those hand thingies to the ones which just have digits.

emc

" When in doubt, use brute force." — Ken Thompson
  • Comment on Re: I prefer this kind of clock or watch:

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Re^2: I prefer this kind of clock or watch:
by ambrus (Abbot) on Jan 17, 2006 at 22:09 UTC

    I have seen a watch whose seconds hand rotated continuously (or at least it leaped more often than once per second). It was wierd.

Re^2: I prefer this kind of clock or watch:
by Anonymous Monk on Jan 17, 2006 at 22:33 UTC
    guess you can argue analogue watches don't really exist

    Sure, but only if you want to get all theoretical. Yes, quantum mechanics does state that all matter is discrete at the quantum level, and individual atoms are of course somewhat discrete entities, but that's a bit extreme. If you take that point of view, practially nothing is analogue -- at least, nothing tangible.

    My father had a watch with hands that ran quite smoothly; they may not be as popular as the "retro" jerky-motion watches currently in fashion, but they certainly existed and continue to exist.

Re^2: I prefer this kind of clock or watch:
by apotheon (Deacon) on Jan 19, 2006 at 21:06 UTC

    On the other hand, unless you want to get down to the level of quanta, you could still call it analog if it has a mechanical timepiece motion — it only approximates non-analog functionality that way.

    Also, of course, you could argue that even at the quantum level things are actually analog, since quanta are really only probability waveforms (from a certain perspective at least).

    This could get messy if I keep going. . . .

    print substr("Just another Perl hacker", 0, -2);
    - apotheon
    CopyWrite Chad Perrin

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