> I'll add that if you went the JS route, then it would just be

> replicating the system time, ie replicating the Windows clock. 



Actually, I did this thing once where I included the server time from PHP in 
the JS, then calculate the difference, then use JS to show the actual current 
"time" by offsetting from the known PHP server NTPD time the number of ELAPSED 
seconds on the JS side, what time it really was, regardless of how badly their 
clock was set.



It still seems like more of a "because you can" feature than a "because you 
should" in general.



The app I worked on was a countdown clock until some pre-defined event.



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