A new, easy to use, free, online R system is StatAce (www.statace.com). The GUI analysis is still in infancy (only descriptives, correlation and OLS at this stage) but it supports any and all R code, many libraries, and has good data management (e.g. allows you to save results).
If each computer has unique skew how are they going to establish a common time reference standard? You can't have one phisycal machine sniff the whole net. Having a few however, would mean that the skew they measure is based on their perception of time, which is (as per definition) uniquely skewed.
Now, if they can sync many machines completely, then we can basically do the same.
A new, easy to use, free, online R system is StatAce (www.statace.com). The GUI analysis is still in infancy (only descriptives, correlation and OLS at this stage) but it supports any and all R code, many libraries, and has good data management (e.g. allows you to save results).
Considering this is the US version with Qualcomm chips, the results for the international one with Exynos should be even better.
If each computer has unique skew how are they going to establish a common time reference standard? You can't have one phisycal machine sniff the whole net. Having a few however, would mean that the skew they measure is based on their perception of time, which is (as per definition) uniquely skewed. Now, if they can sync many machines completely, then we can basically do the same.