Time-traveller achievement
From Geohashing
Revision as of 14:48, 25 April 2016 by imported>Benjw (clarify the 'lucky' points)
This user earned the Time-traveller achievement
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The achievement can be claimed if you venture to two or more geohashing locations on the same day and the same local time.
If you don't own a time-machine, you could ...
- cross a time-zone border.
- take advantage of the autumn daylight saving clocks change.
- Geohashers nearer the equator are at a disadvantage because they have further to travel east or west.
- Geohashers near longitude 0° or 180° might be lucky and not have to travel far at all.
- get lucky.
- Near the prime meridian, you might be in the circle of uncertainty for two hashpoints simultaneously. At the equator, this happens if the longitude of the hashpoint is less than +/- 0.000036°.
- Further from the equator this longitude can be calculated from 0.000036° / cos(Latitude). The poles are singularities, so if the hashpoint latitude is very close to 90°, it would be possible to be standing on 360 hashpoints at once!
- A similar effect applies at longitude +/- 179.999964°, but only at weekends.
- On weekdays hashpoints east and west of longitude 30°W are calculated separately, so may both be close to 30°W or 180°E/W. However, pretty much all of these points will be in an ocean.
Of course, as usual, you need to upload photos of yourself containing the necessary proof.
Winners
- Woodveil was at the 2009-03-08 33 -84 and 2009-03-08 33 -85 hashes at 12:39 local time.
- B2c and Patrizius were at the 2013-10-27 47 13 and 2013-10-27 47 12 hashes at 02:09 local time. It was a DST time travel.
- Micsnare and B2c were at the 2014-10-26 47 14 and 2014-10-26 47 13 hashes at 02:01 local time. It was a DST time travel. Again ;)
See also
Multihash -- reach multiple geohashes on one day