We just had our bi-yearly annoying time change where I live.
Each time I boot up my system, the system time has returned to what it
was before, that is to say, it's exactly one hour early. I do an ntpdate
and it's corrected. I reboot or power down, come back up, and it's set
back to the wrong
Am Dienstag, 5. April 2005 13:10 schrieb ext fire-eyes:
Each time I boot up my system, the system time has returned to what it
was before, that is to say, it's exactly one hour early. I do an ntpdate
and it's corrected. I reboot or power down, come back up, and it's set
back to the wrong time
Hello,
On Tue, 5 Apr 2005 13:34:22 +0200 Dirk Heinrichs ext-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Am Dienstag, 5. April 2005 13:10 schrieb ext fire-eyes:
Each time I boot up my system, the system time has returned to what it
was before, that is to say, it's exactly one hour early. I do an
ntpdate
Only problem with UTC in bios is for those of us who (have to!) keep
MonopolSoft's wunnerful(Hic!) system on the same computer.
sigh.
rgh.
Hans-Werner Hilse wrote:
snip
On Tue, 5 Apr 2005 13:34:22 +0200 Dirk Heinrichs ext-
In the bios, set your system clock to UTC time, then tell Linux about
On Tue, 05 Apr 2005 12:44:37 -0400, Robert G. Hays wrote:
Only problem with UTC in bios is for those of us who (have to!) keep
MonopolSoft's wunnerful(Hic!) system on the same computer.
No problem, Gentoo is smart enough to know about such things. Set your
BIOS clock to local time and put