NTP Pool Project Reaches 500 Servers
flok writes "Finally after 3 years the NTP Pool project has reached 500 servers! The NTP pool project tries to be an accurate and free time-source to every internet-connected device. Everybody who's system has running an NTP daemon which can give an accurate time-indication can join the project. Not only is it handy to have accurate time on your workstation to be able to see when you need to leave the house to catch the train in time, it is also usefull to be able to accurately correlate events between your system and others in case one gets hacked."
Of course, most machines locked in a rack in a hosting facility don't have even the slightest chance of seeing enough sky to lock onto GPS, so it's safe to say that NTP's death or obsolesence is premature to announce just yet. :-)
--
-Chuck
PS: O Slashdot wizards, why does Slashdot's posting filter claim ntpq output is lame?
It's a conspiracy, I tell you, to force me to write more text!
Bah, that doesn't work, the lameness filter doesn't like a line filled with "=" signs at all, even if I use an <ecode> tag.
"The human race's favorite method for being in control of the facts is to ignore them." -Celia Green
It would also be nice if ISPs would set up their own pools (and advertise them) so clients wouldn't have to go off network, and then if end-users would would set up their own pool for their networks. Not every machine that needs accurate time has to be at stratum-2 or stratum-3, especially workstations. The NTP Pool website makes it look like it is a good idea if every machine on a network syncs to the NTP Pool, instead of setting up internal servers, which is how NTP is really designed to work.
(S(SKK)(SKK))(S(SKK)(SKK))