Package: kernel-image-2.6.11-1-686 Version: 2.6.11-5 Followup-For: Bug #312973
I've been observing how my system clock behaves over the past week or so. The drift rate changes when I reboot into Linux (Windows doesn't drift at all) and it seems to be random. Sometimes it will drift about 5 seconds per minute, and that's when the music speeds up. On average it does about 2 seconds per minute over. Sometimes I get lucky and get about 0.1 seconds per minute. Not sure if this will help, but the rate of drift seems to cause xine's A/V sync to drift too, at a rate proportional to the clock drift. So it seems like the video is being clocked, while the audio isn't, and so the audio begins to lag. Let me know if you need any more info. This is getting terribly annoying, especially since I can't make any more headway in a Linux vs. Windows debate I'm having with a friend... -- System Information: Debian Release: testing/unstable APT prefers testing APT policy: (500, 'testing') Architecture: i386 (i686) Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash Kernel: Linux 2.6.11-1-686 Locale: LANG=C, LC_CTYPE=C (charmap=ANSI_X3.4-1968) Versions of packages kernel-image-2.6.11-1-686 depends on: ii coreutils [fileutils] 5.2.1-2 The GNU core utilities ii fileutils 5.2.1-2 The GNU file management utilities ii initrd-tools 0.1.81.1 tools to create initrd image for p ii module-init-tools 3.2-pre1-2 tools for managing Linux kernel mo -- no debconf information --- [This E-mail scanned for viruses by Declude Virus] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

