> Facility operators anticipated needing to shutdown the heat-exchange infrastructure providing air cooling to many parts of the building, including some internal networking closets. As a result, many of these too were preemptively shutdown with the result that our group lacks much of the monitoring and control capabilities we ordinarily have
Having a parallel low bandwidth, low power, low waste heat network infrastructure for this suddenly seems useful.
Of the various internet .+P, NTP is one I never learned about as a student, so now I'm looking at its web page [1] by its creator David L. Mills (1938-2024). I've found one video of him giving a retrospective of his extensive internet work; he talks about NTP at 34:51 [2] and later at 56:26 [3].
[1] https://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills/ntp.html
NIST campus status: Due to elevated fire risk and a power outage for the Boulder area, the DOC Boulder Labs campus is CLOSED on December 19 for onsite business and no public access is permitted; previously approved accesses are revoked.[1]
WWV still seems to be up, including voice phone access.
NIST Boulder has a recorded phone number for site status, and it says that as of December 20, the site is closed with no access.
NIST's main web site says they put status info on various social media accounts, but there's no announcement about this.
Can anybody expand on the implications of this?
Being unfamiliar with it, it's hard to tell if this is a minor blip that happens all the time, or if it's potentially a major issue that could cause cascading errors equal to the hype of Y2K.
So far I think I'm still seeing one of them in my peers list for my public-ish NTP server:
remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter
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+time-e-b.nist.g .NIST. 1 u 372 1024 377 125.260 1.314 0.280This makes me wonder, if you take the average time of all wristwatches on the planet, accounting for timezones and throwing out outliers, how close would you get to NTP time?
And how many randomly chosen wristwatches would you need to get anything reasonable?
For future reference of civilization: if a facility is critical, it must have a SMR.
Status of NIST time servers:
This was an NTP 0 server right? What is the actual failback mechanism when that level of NTP server fails?
This is some level of eldritch magic that I am aware of, but not familiar with but am interested in learning.
Man, they're having a hell of a time up in Boulder.
Well, where did NTP at NIST last put it? Did they look there?
Wind gusts were reaching 125 MPH in Boulder county, if anyone’s curious. A lot of power was shut off preemptively to prevent downed power lines from starting wildfires. Energy providers gave warning to locals in advance. Shame that NIST’s backup generator failed, though.