Daimyo Clock im Vergleich zu Navicartum Nutzung und Statistiken

Daimyo clock is a recreation of a mechanical clock developed in the seventeen century based on western clocks but modified to show traditional Japanese time. Traditional Japanese time divides the day and night into six equal periods from dawn to dusk and dusk to dawn respectively. Over the course of a year as the daylight and nighttime periods lengthen and shorten, the length of these six day or night periods change. Unlike Western clocks which are regulated by a single pendulum and run at a constant speed day or night, Japanese clocks incorporated two pendulums, and switched between them at dawn and dusk. Adjustment for the changing daylight and nighttime hours was accomplished by adjusting the effective length of the pendulums, normally done every two weeks, or twenty-six times a year. This kept the time shown on the clock reasonably close to the correct time, provided that the clock had been set correctly initially. This modern implementation is much more accurate and precise than the original clocks. In this implementation, the biweekly adjustments of the mechanical clock are made continuously, thus the day or night period length are always correct. Noon on the clock will, if location services are enabled, occur when the sun is at the zenith, or solar noon. Day start and end correspond to the beginning or end of twilight, and are calculated accounting for the refraction of the Earth's atmosphere. There are three situations where the clock my not show the local time in the Japanese manner: 1. If location services are off, Daimyo Clock will show the time for Tokyo, Japan. 東京 will be displayed on the clock face in this case. 2. While the application is obtaining an updated location after launch or returning to foreground. 3. Near the North or South poles the sun may either be above the horizon or below it for the entire day (24 hour period). In this case, the Japanese definition of time no longer applies, so the clock face will be shown without a clock hand.
  • Apple App Store
  • Kostenlos
  • Bildung

Rang speichern

- -

Navicartum - the reference app for HEMAists. The historical treatice, newly edited as an app with all the luxuries of modern times, like for example bookmarks, notes and full text search, different font sizes and zoomable images. Work with the treatise without ruining it with dog-ears and side notes, and all of that nice and compact in your smartphone or tablet. In the book "Thorough Descriptions of the Art of Fencing..." of Joachim Meyer (published in 1570) we find a comprehensive work on the renaissance time fencing with many weapons. More precisely on the sword, the dusack, the rapier, the dagger and the staff (the later contains staff, halberd and pike). This app is dedicated to the first part of Joachim Meyer's work, the sword. Navicartum features not only a transcription and translation of the sword part of the fencing treatise including all images, but also a newly composed version of the book as a reference book. It contains among other things conceptual interpretations of all techniques and an improved referencing and description of all images. And all of this in combination with the merits of features of the modern times, like f.e. bookmarks, notes and a full text search feature.
  • Apple App Store
  • Bezahlt
  • Referenz

Rang speichern

- -

Daimyo Clockvs. Navicartum Ranking-Vergleich

Vergleichen Sie Daimyo Clock den Ranking-Trend der letzten 28 Tage mit Navicartum

Rang

Keine Daten verfügbar

Daimyo Clock im Vergleich zu Navicartum Ranking im Ländervergleich

Vergleichen Sie Daimyo Clock den Ranking-Trend der letzten 28 Tage mit Navicartum

Keine Daten zum Anzeigen

Stellen Sie mit unserer kostenlosen Testversion Vergleiche mit jeder Website an

Los geht's
Daimyo Clock VS.
Navicartum

Dezember 19, 2024