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Applewood days quantifiably slipperier than elsewhere, everywhere

  • G Papa Tango
  • Mar 13
  • 2 min read

Time in Applewood doesn’t just pass—it slides. Days here have a way of getting away from you, faster than they should, as if the hours themselves are greased. Ask any longtime resident, and they’ll tell you: a morning coffee turns into an afternoon errand, and suddenly it’s dusk. Summer arrives in a rush, lingers for a moment, then vanishes before anyone’s fully settled into it.


Maybe it’s the way Applewood’s rhythm bends to its own logic, the way old friends run into each other at the plaza and lose track of time, the way a quick walk turns into a meandering conversation, the way the years stack up before anyone realizes how tall they’ve grown.


Elsewhere, clocks tick with predictable precision. But here, in some unspoken way, time is looser. Slipperier. And no matter how tightly you try to hold on, it always finds a way to move just a little faster than expected.




 

FURTHERMOREOVERKILL

 


G Papa Tango, remind us of that concept entertained by Swatch a while ago, whereat I think 1000 beats replaced one day.

 


You're thinking of Swatch Internet Time, a system Swatch introduced in 1998. Instead of using traditional hours and minutes, the day was divided into 1,000 "beats", each lasting 1 minute and 26.4 seconds.


The system eliminated time zones—the same "beat" applied worldwide—and used @Biel Mean Time (BMT), centered on Swatch’s headquarters in Biel, Switzerland. The idea was to create a universal time standard for the internet age, but it never really caught on beyond niche tech circles and marketing gimmicks. Some early adopters included online communities and even the video game Phantasy Star Online.


Wouldn't it be fun if Swatch had actually pulled it off? We'd all be meeting up at @750 instead of "3 PM."








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