On 4/28/06, Fargusson.Alan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
This isn't quite right.  Windows does use GMT (it might be UTC, but I think it 
is GMT).  The confusion comes from two things:  Some Windows users don't set 
the timezone right, and this makes the hardware clock wrong.  Some RTCs are 
broken, especially old 386 based systems.  The trick of getting the local time 
from the RTC is to work around broken RTCs.

So that's more recent windows then? I am pretty sure Windows would set
the RTC to local time, even DST. This was the reason for the pop-up
window after the time change because in dual-boot you never knew
whether another OS already had changed the RTC to DST.

--
Rob van der Heij
Velocity Software, Inc
http://velocitysoftware.com/

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