Hi...
Tabitha was right!  There is something funny happening with the date/time 
settings on the 10 XO-1s I am transferring to another project.
Last night I reflashed all 10 of the machines to 11.2.0 (os874).  This morning 
I met with the two teachers, who will be using the machines most, to orient 
them on the ins and outs of the XO and Sugar.  We used 3 of the machines for 
the workshop.  While working we found funny dates coming up so, following 
Tabitha's advice, I showed them how to go to Terminal and ask for the date.
Two of us had dates in 1999.  The other one was in 2028!  These machines are 
XO-1s from a CP project that was stalled.  They appear to be in new, or 
near-new, condition so I doubt they have a problem with the clock battery. 
(They boot just fine).
So, how do we reset to the current time?  In the "Fix Clock" section of the 
wiki there are instructions for resetting the date and time if you can "Boot 
Into Linux."  Since Sugar can boot just fine, can we just go into Terminal and 
put in the same command?
http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Fix_Clock#If_the_screen_turns_on_and_you_can_boot_into_Linux
Will the change persist through future boots and software updates?  If the fix 
is something else... what is it?
Thanks!
Caryl
Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2011 19:30:48 +1200
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Testing] [support-gang] 12-Year-Old XOs (even 18-yesr-olds)

On 29 August 2011 16:16, Caryl Bigenho <[email protected]> wrote:






Later, when I looked at the Journal entries on some of the machines, I found 
they were incredibly old.... like 12 years! (Image3). There was one that said 
"18 years ago" also, but I seem to have misplaced the image.

Did you check what year the laptop thought it was? 
If prior to you making any changes the laptop time was set to very far in the 
past, and then while doing the updating the time got reset to the current time, 
or anytime 12 years later than when the journal entries were created, then you 
could get that time showing in the journal. 

To check the current time set on the laptop, open terminal and type date and 
press enter. 
Tabitha


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