At 07:23 AM 11/27/2001 -0500, Tom Brinkman wrote:
>
> hwclock --hctosys
> Set the System Time from the Hardware Clock.
>
> hwclock --systohc
> Set the Hardware Clock to the current System Time.
>
> (see man hwclock) I use this alias in bashrc to set both
>hardwar
thanks big and bitter tom. ;-) ill get around it when i do my reinstall today (or
tomorrow, depending on the schedule)
ciao!
On Tue, 27 Nov 2001 07:23:20 -0500, Tom Brinkman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tuesday 27 November 2001 09:44 am, Anuerin G.Diaz wrote:
> hi to all,
>
>t
s
Not installed by default.
-JMS
|-Original Message-
|From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
|[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Anuerin G.Diaz
|Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2001 10:20 AM
|To: mandrake
|Subject: Re: [newbie] Clock Synchronization
|
|
It should be on the CD-ROM (if you have a copy of the install CD's).
At 03:20 PM 11/27/2001 +, Anuerin G.Diaz wrote:
>
>im using LM8.1 and i dont have any rdate executable, either as an ordinary
>user or as root. ill try to find one tomorrow when my net connection resumes
>here in the offic
On Tuesday 27 November 2001 09:44 am, Anuerin G.Diaz wrote:
> hi to all,
>
>this is one problem that I shelved that i remembered just now...
>
>how do I synchonize the linux clock with the BIOS clock? The
> timezone here is GMT+8. If I select 'Manila' in the timezone, the
> BIOS clock gets
It's on the CD's
Not installed by default.
-JMS
|-Original Message-
|From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
|[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Anuerin G.Diaz
|Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2001 10:20 AM
|To: mandrake
|Subject: Re: [newbie] Clock Synchronization
|
|
|
|im using L