On Sun, 3 Aug 2003 03:03 pm, Rolf Pedersen wholly or partly mentioned :- > Jim C wrote: > > I've just discovered that on one of my systems I have the common > > Windows/Linux time problem where the time is always off in one system or > > the other i.e. the Windows clock settings differ from the Linux clock > > settings. Has something to do with GMT or some such. > > Anyway I'm pretty sure I understand why this is but what is the fix? > > > > Jim C. > > IIANM, Windows will set you bios clock to the local time, so you need to > run linux in local time to avoid mismatches. In Mandrake Control Center > > > System > Date & Time, at least fiddle with the time to invoke a > > configuration change, apply it, and you will be asked if your > system/hardware clock is UTC. Say no to this and all should be > kopesetik. I just went round and round with this and had to do this > twice to get a boot with the right time. Don't know why. > > Rolf
If you have a dual boot and do this at install, there is never a problem again. Just make certain that both check boxes are left empty. The time is always correct from then on. HTH -- Life, we learn too late, is in the living, in the tissue of every day and hour. Stephen Leacock This email is guaranteed to be wholly Linux Mandrake 9.1, Kmail v1.5 and OpenOffice.org1.1Beta
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