Newsgroups: comp.protocols.time.ntp
Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!think.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!mstar!mstar.morningstar.com!bob
From: bob@MorningStar.Com (Bob Sutterfield)
Subject: Re: synchronizing a LAN-full of machines
In-Reply-To: billd@fps.com's message of 17 May 91 22:11:18 GMT
Message-ID: <BOB.91May20094927@volitans.MorningStar.Com>
Sender: usenet@MorningStar.COM (USENET Administrator)
Reply-To: bob@MorningStar.Com (Bob Sutterfield)
Organization: Morning Star Technologies
References: <9105171342.AA23309@volitans.morningstar.com> <17835@celit.fps.com>
Distribution: inet
Date: Mon, 20 May 91 13:49:36 GMT
Lines: 19

In article <17835@celit.fps.com> billd@fps.com (Bill Davidson) writes:
   In article <9105171342.AA23309@volitans.morningstar.com> bob@morningstar.com (Bob Sutterfield) writes:
      I don't know why Sun doesn't provide some sort of timekeeping
      system... Perhaps it's a matter of waiting until the "research
      toys" filter down into the "real world" of commercial demands.

   I've always thought it strange too.  

I'm informed by a reliable source within Sun that

	From: DeepThroat@Somewhere.Sun.COM (Deep Throat)
	To: bob@morningstar.com
	Subject: Re: synchronizing a LAN-full of machines
	
	Sun will deliver SVR4 with NTP..  A V3 daemon if [it gets]
	done in time.

So, as I speculated, there's no sinister plot against timekeeping, and
no negligence, merely a matter of waiting until they get around to it.
