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The Sunday 2007-11-04 at 11:07 -0600, Bryen wrote:
On Sun, 2007-11-04 at 08:01 -0800, Randall R Schulz wrote:
Use NTP. It's easy to configure (YaST has a module just for NTP
configuration) and (on 10.3, at the very least), there's a
pre-programmed set of public NTP servers you can enable. (I use my
ISP's NTP server to get the lowest latency between me and the time
server.)
I do use NTP and have the NTP daemon running constantly. But NTP
doesn't contain tzinfo/zones.
Yes.
NTP sets the minutes and seconds. The
Hours part of time is set by the tzinfo contained in your computer.
No! NTP sets everything. But remember that it sets up the internal unix
time, which is related to UTC time, wich does not have summer/winter
shifts. It doesn't touch the timezone data. It's up to the operating
system to convert that internal clock to the displayed time.
Questions: your bios keeps UTC or local time? And, did you double boot to
windows? Both those things could cause your problem.
- --
Cheers,
Carlos E. R.
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