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This DIY Time Server Is More Accurate Than You Need

You almost certainly don’t have an application for the sort of accurate timekeeping that’s made possible by this enhanced version of [Cristiano Monteiro]’s satellite-backed time server. By his own admission, the vast majority of users will be more than happy to have their system’s time synchronized by the traditional Network Time Protocol (NTP). But if you’re really chasing those last few microseconds, that’s where the Precision Time Protocol (PTP) comes in.

With NTP, you can get within 10 milliseconds or so of your upstream time source — but PTP is accurate down to nanoseconds. Unless you’re performing some kind of scientific research, running a robotic assembly line, or perhaps doing high-speed financial trading, there’s no reason for this level of accuracy. In fact, PTP is such a niche technology that until the release of the ESP32-P4, [Cristiano] couldn’t even find an affordable enough chip that supported it.

ImageHardware-level support for PTP is important as there’s no way to achieve this level of accuracy with software alone, the capability needs to be baked into the Ethernet controller. As you might expect, it takes a highly accurate time source to make the most of PTP, and that’s where the navigation-grade Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) receiver comes in. All told the cost of the build is unsurprisingly higher than that of its predecessor, but [Cristiano] says it’s still a couple zeros shy of what a commercial offering would run.

As with his original time server from 2021, [Cristiano] made sure this build was as friendly as possible for hackers and makers. We especially like the 3D printed case designed in OpenSCAD, and his insistence that the gadget have a front panel with blinking status LEDs. Again, the vast majority of us don’t need our clocks to be accurate down to the nanosecond…but it’s nice to know we have the option.

A PCjr running an SNTP server

IBM PCjr From 1984 Keeps Today’s Clocks Running In Sync

We’ve gotten used to the fact that the clocks on our internet-connected computers and smartphones are always telling the right time. Time servers, provided by a variety of government agencies as well as tech giants, provide them with the exact time and date thanks to accurate atomic clocks and the clever Network Time Protocol (NTP). But it wasn’t always like this: back in the 1990s when many computers didn’t have an internet connection, we had to adjust our computers’ clocks manually. Go back one more decade, and many PCs didn’t even have a battery-backed clock at all; you either set the proper date and time when the computer booted, or just lived with the fact that all new files were timestamped 01-01-1980.

[Michael Brutman] decided to mix today’s world of network time synchronization with the old world of batteryless PCs, and built an SNTP Time Server that runs on a DOS PC. He tried it with two different hardware setups: a 40 MHz 386 PC from 1993, and the (in)famous IBM PCjr from 1984. A standard GPS module serves as an accurate time reference; these units can often be directly connected to old hardware thanks to the eternal RS-232 standard.

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