home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- May 11, 1994
- Dear NRC time service user,
- I am sure you have heard many a pitch for money and have grown
- tired of them. So I spare you speeches about civic responsibility and
- patriotic virtues. Instead I ask you to take a minute to think of
- the economics of public services in Canada and the political realities.
- I am writing to you under the assumption that you have clued in to the
- importance of a national (or continental) time standard and, as a computer
- professional, have enough foresight to see the coming of the age where
- distributed client-server processing will simply force much more rigorous
- time synchronization of systems than is the case in most places now.
- If that is coming then an inexpensive, authoritative time provider would bec-
- ome a precious resource. But my point is that we already have one (in Canada)
- and the question then is not 'can we get it' but 'how do we keep it'.
- How do we keep it at a time when the first business of government is
- to cut spending ? How do we convince the federal buraucrats that we need an
- upgrade of a very precious service ? At these times ?
- I have had a very simple idea. Given that there are no free lunches
- around anymore, why do not we send them each $25 once every year or so, for
- the National Research Council to upgrade the equipment which we use. This,
- of course, gives us some clout, an initiative that no government will over-
- look. Perhaps, in time we will get enough attention for the NRC to put
- a decent communication front-end on some very fine and expensive time
- measuring equipment. Please, think about it !
- Now, if you think this is in your long-term interest, please, send in
- the next page with your signature and your contribution. U.S. citizens, may
- of course participate by sending an equivalent ($20). However, for reasons
- political, I would ask them not to send in the form letter, but - if they
- so wish - a short, personally worded letter of appreciation. Send your letters
- and a cheque or money order to the order of National Research Council Canada
- to:
-
- Jiri Severa
- 101 Renfrew Ave.,
- Ottawa, ON
- K1S 1Z6
- CANADA
-
-
- Thanks for participating.
-
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- The Director
- National Research Council ...................
- Canada d a t e
- Ottawa, Ontario
- K1A 0R6
-
- Re : Request for Contiuance of Time Service for Computers
-
-
- Dear Sir/ Madam,
-
- I wish to express my appreciation for the existing time services
- the Institute for National Measurement Standards provides as a public
- service. As someone who uses the time service regularly and who has come
- to rely on it I am also concerned about how much attention the maintenance
- of this service receives, especially in the view of the growing demand for
- it, one one hand, and the 'more-with-less' philosophy of curtailed government
- spending, on the other. I believe we deserve a national time standard in
- Canada. Allow me then to make a voluntary contribution of $ , as a member
- of a community of users of NRC's Time Service for Computers (and Automated
- Systems). I would like my contribution to be used towards the upkeep and
- procurement of new equipment for this fine service.
-
-
- Yours sincerely,
-
-
-
-
-
- Name ..........................
- (please print)
-
-
- address ......................
-
- ......................
-
- ......................
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------