David J Taylor wrote:

Yes, I was also in a network management role at the time, and I don't recall it being an issue in the UK. Our Windows NT servers at that time were almost certainly running NTP, and IIRC the clients had a NET TIME /SET command (or whatever) in the login script. Most clients were

A properly configured server will handle NTP just fine.

It's not that uncommon for people to have their windows servers set to completely the wrong timezone (often either Seattle time, since that's the default, or GMT (for some reason)) which works fine right up until the point they try to use something which modifies the time like NTP (or anything that relies on the UTC time such as the software I work with). At that point it all goes pear shaped, since Windows bases all its UTC times on the current timezone and vice/versa (ie. you set UTC, you change 'local time' in the BIOS).

Those kind of bug reports are a 'mare of course.. you have to (a) prove your software is working correctly, and (b) tell them that they've setup their machines wrong... really nicely...

Tony

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