There are a few other serious websites out there looking at the possibility of timelessness you may want to check out.
for example this site (and eBook) by Simon Morley, that meticulously analyses at our dictionary definitions around 'Time'.
Four Dimensional Spatial Relativity - Physics
The 5 Most Important Amateur Scientists
- that essentially,with respect to the aspects that are correct, I disagree with - because they often discuss what 'IS' time, without first proving that extra to 'just motion', time exists and 'is' something.
What is time? | plus.maths.org
Is time travel allowed? | plus.maths.org
From Eternity to Here: The Quest for the Ultimate Theory of Time, by Sean Carroll
Very interesting book, but even at the start the question 'Why do we remember the past, but not the future?' is leading, in that it assumes 'the' past and 'the' future exist in some way. We can re-frame this question - ' why can we see inside our own heads but not round a corner?' and things become much simpler!
See > ∆ Remembering the past but not the future. - A Brief History of Timelessness - Matt Welcome.
theophysics.ifastnet.com/pdf/tipler-rotating-cylinders.pdf
Public Lectures at Princeton » Leonard Susskind
very interesting, particular if looked at in timeless terms because it shows how information is not lost, or appearing from anywhere - but can be 'trapped' in the 'sin bin' of a black hole. And thus kind of 'out of the game' in places.
Relativity: Einstein's theory of relativity in animations and film clips. Einstein Light
great animated site
The Physics and Phenomenology of Time
Spacetime - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gravity’s effect on time confirmed - physicsworld.com
I would disagree, this may be 'gravity's effect on the rate at which things change (now) confirmed'. i.e the article doesnt show the existence of a past, or a future, or the existence of a thing called time - that flows between them - or how this thing called time is afected by gravity.
The Galileo Project | Chronology | Galileo Timeline
Time [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
'Time is what clocks measure' - 'clocks' are motors, which measure if anything the release of energy from a spring or battery etc.