That's 12x60 days, you're thinking? Yeah, a minute a day.
Natter 34: Freak With No Name
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I like mine and Nutty's answer. It may not be correct, but it makes more sense.
t munches popcorn
Wait! Next, they are going to take on the chicken or egg thing. It'll be great.
How does it make sense?
It's noon. The clock says it's 12:00.
23:59 hours later, it's 11:59 and the clock says it's 12:00. How is that right?
Chicken.
Silly Cindy. Chickens can't tell time.
That's why they keep crossing roads.
t hang on another 990-odd years, and they will be on the '00 -vs- '01 Millenium thing. It will rock.
Why do you say it matters analog/digital, Jessica?
-t, you may not be taking your next test when you'd planned, but you have the brain of a number wonk.
Figuring a regular analog clock, it'll gain 24 minutes per day. So then it'll take 30 days to gain 720 minutes (=12 hours.)
The problem with the 24 h 1 minute answer is that, figure it's now 12:00. In 24 hours, it will be 12:00 and the clock will say 12:01. In 24 hours 1 minute, it will be 12:01 and the clock will now say 12:02 (and some fraction of a second). The difference between the real time and the clock time starts out small, but keeps getting bigger, until it gets all the way around the clock, to the point where it looks right but is really 12 hours off.