24 and 60 equally fail when you try to turn days into years. That doesn't mean you give up on picking a good system for fractions of days and multiples of years.
There is no[1] advantage to having a smattering of small factors. People make much too big a deal about dividing into thirds.
[1] "no" in the same way that decimalization has no advantage, in that the advantages of either system are small and unnecessary.
We didn't give up. We found one and we stuck to it. I don't care about factoring, that's a minor cool hack.
The point is simple: Adding or removing dots from the face of a clock is a complete waste of (heh) time.
If you people really need to wank over a calender, pick one with jugs in it or get rid of timezones and daylight savings. That would be actually helpful.
> Adding or removing dots from the face of a clock is a complete waste of (heh) time.
Nobody was advocating for doing that. You started an argument about doing so, in reply to a post merely saying that it would be "as convenient" as the current system, and that decimal time failed because we already had a unified time system.
> If you people really need to wank over a calender
Nobody had even mentioned calendars until you showed up. "you people" = "ChoHag".
There is no[1] advantage to having a smattering of small factors. People make much too big a deal about dividing into thirds.
[1] "no" in the same way that decimalization has no advantage, in that the advantages of either system are small and unnecessary.