Yeah, but that didn't happen, I only graded cards after having
corrected the date and time...apart from that...do you think I am
right-in principle-about the problem of incorrectly graded cards
cancelling out in the long run?

Thanks, Jakub

On 2 dic, 19:45, Peter Bienstman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The timezone thing is one issue, but I've you've graded some cards while
> Mnemosyne thought the date was 1970, the scheduling could be completely off...
>
> Peter
>
> On Tuesday 02 December 2008 19:34:14 notstrom wrote:
>
> > Dear Peter,
>
> > thank you very much for your reply. Interestingly, today the program
> > appeared to re-schedule again some time between 17:00 and 20:00...
> > Maybe some time zone-setting that I have inadvertedly changed?
> > Anyway...I thought that if I'd just go on learning the worst thing
> > that could happen would be that some cards would get shown too early
> > while others would come up too late, which would cancel out anyhow in
> > the long run (as I would grade them as being to simple and to
> > difficult, respectively during the first few presentations). Would you
> > agree?
>
> > Thanks a lot!
>
> > Jakub
>
> > On 2 dic, 18:21, Peter Bienstman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > It's hard to say what exactly happened. The safest would be to restore
> > > from a backup.
>
> > > Peter
>
> > > On Tuesday 02 December 2008 17:49:52 notstrom wrote:
> > > > Hello,
>
> > > > I wonder whether somebody could help me with this: yesterday around 6
> > > > pm, I had gone through all the cards that had been scheduled for that
> > > > day. Then, around 10 pm, I had to set the system date and time anew,
> > > > because, after resetting my (linux-based) computer it had been set to
> > > > 01.01.1970. After correcting for this, I ran mnemosyne again and
> > > > suddenly I had 40 cards scheduled (where there should have been none;
> > > > these didn't seem to be exactly the same cards as those that I had
> > > > learned that day). This morning, I still had these 40 cards scheduled
> > > > (not more). The only explanation I could come up with is that
> > > > mnemosyne had exceptionally made the date transition (re-scheduling)
> > > > somewhere between 6 pm and 10 pm. Is this possible? From what I've
> > > > experienced, the program does not re-schedule (switch date) at 24:00
> > > > but only around 3 am... Can I just go on learning or should I restore
> > > > from an earlier backup?
>
> > > > Thank you very much.
>
> > > --
> > > ------------------------------------------------
> > > Peter Bienstman
> > > Ghent University, Dept. of Information Technology
> > > Sint-Pietersnieuwstraat 41, B-9000 Gent, Belgium
> > > tel: +32 9 264 34 46, fax: +32 9 264 35 93
> > > WWW:http://photonics.intec.UGent.be
> > > email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > > ------------------------------------------------
>
> --
> ------------------------------------------------
> Peter Bienstman
> Ghent University, Dept. of Information Technology
> Sint-Pietersnieuwstraat 41, B-9000 Gent, Belgium
> tel: +32 9 264 34 46, fax: +32 9 264 35 93
> WWW:http://photonics.intec.UGent.be
> email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> ------------------------------------------------
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