|
|
|
|
|
by nerdy
3388 days ago
|
|
I think he's talking about the ratio of a microsecond to a half hour to express scale, a microsecond to a half hour is approximate (to an order of magnitude) to 10^9. 1000000 (microseconds/second) * 60 (sec/min) * 30 (min for a half hour) =
1800000000 10^9=
1000000000 |
|
I'm realizing as I type this that I am not totally clear here and I will do some reflection now as to how to rewrite this point so it does not raise such objections. Thank you again for your help with this.
But I am talking about scale. The number of different size "bricks" or "units" of time that you can choose in which to execute concurrent or dependent logic is staggering. And all too often this is overlooked. Thus "February 29 bugs" and "New Years Day" bugs, not to mention the entire error classes of race conditions and cascading failures.