[LEAPSECS] Common Calendar Time (CCT) -Brooks Harris
    Brooks Harris 
    brooks at edlmax.com
       
    Fri Jan 17 19:28:36 EST 2014
    
    
  
On 2014-01-17 04:06 AM, Zefram wrote:
>> - Leap Seconds don't (theoretically) only "leap" - they could also "drop"
> The word "leap" doesn't carry any connotation about direction.
In our world, that of television and media, is certainly does!
I think this is a really important point because it illustrates how 
misunderstandings can propagate without good definitions of terms.
In television there is a really important standard, often called for 
short hand, "timecode", sometimes "SMPTE" (after the standards body that 
created it), sometime "EBU", because SMPTE cooperated with the "European 
Broadcast Union" (another standards body) when they created it. Its 
current incarnation is SMPTE 12M-1-2008.
Wikipedia has a reasonable explanation of it -
SMPTE timecode
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMPTE_timecode
"SMPTE timecode" is ubiquitous - it underlies the timing of everything 
you watch and most of what you listen to - broadcast television, cable, 
YouTube, Windows Media, Netflix, Flash (Adobe) and on and on. It also 
heavily used in law enforcement, military, scientific and many 
industrial operations. Its been around since the late 1960s.
"SMPTE timecode" handles labeling video frames with hh:mm:ss:frames. In 
the US and Japan, the tv standard NTSC is used. The "nominal frame rate" 
of NTSC is "30 frames per second", but the *true* rate is 30000/1001 
frames per second. This is approximately 29.97002997002997... Its a 
nasty number.
Its not "real-time", so "SMPTE timecode" has a 'counting method' called 
"drop frame". This "drops" frame numbers from the the incrementing frame 
count such that the hh:mm:ss portion of the labels represent 
approximately real-time hh;mm:ss. We deal with this all the time.
To us,  to "drop" a count and to "leap" a count (which we have to do 
sometimes) have inverse meanings.
To me, a "positive Leap Second" is a "leap count", but a "negative Leap 
Second" is a "drop count", so "Leap Seconds" always seemed completely 
misnamed to begin with. Granted, it may never do a "negative Leap 
Second", so I figured it was just a simplification.
So there you see how a simple concept is completely misinterpreted by 
someone from another discipline. We've really got to have a proper 
"terms and definitions" document from which we're working!
-Brooks
    
    
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