I have to admit I was very glad indeed that my match had been shifted once I saw the ingredients...
I wouldn't be.
Sanzuo, humle minion: This is your only warning. My ingredients will be posted at 9:19 am CST tomorrow morning. From then, you will have 24 hours to complete your submissions.
And let me just say that I'm glad I know neither of you personally.
Oh, snap.I wouldn't be.
Sanzuo, humle minion: This is your only warning. My ingredients will be posted at 9:19 am CST tomorrow morning. From then, you will have 24 hours to complete your submissions.
And let me just say that I'm glad I know neither of you personally.
A chronometer is a device that measures time...it could be a sundial, an hourglass, a grandfather clock, a waterclock, whatever. It had such potential...but both contestants dropped it. Radiating Gnome ain't gonna like this...he hates McGuffins.
In "WCGtD," the broken chronometer could have been replaced with nearly any broken object...two pieces of a broken sword, two halves of a friendship bracelet, etc., and the story wouldn't notice. And in "GiG," the chronometer isn't a chronometer at all, but a sextant or compass or something more suited to measuring distance or location, not time. And even so, it could have been replaced quite easily with a map. Time, or the need to measure it, isn't a significant part of either story.
That's why I double-bagged it in SBLOCKs.I'm glad I didn't let myself look at this thread until I'd written my response!
Holy crap, you are absolutely right. I totally forgot about solar or tidal navigation, and I had no idea you could find Lon that way. Apologies, ender! (And thanks for not calling me out for my ignorance in your reply. XP for you!)Just FWIW, A chronometer was an important part of a navigator's toolkit -- the sextant is used to determine latitude, and to help determine the exact moment of solar noon. Once you have solar noon, you can check your chronometer to determine noon at Greenwich, and use the difference between the two to determine your longitude. And, reliable time was also incredibly important for ships when they need information about the tides -- which is how the chronometer is used in this case in GG. I found it very well used in that case, actually.