On Sun, 10 Feb 2002 at 15:30, Michael Balcos wrote: > Ofcourse, the easiest way to work around this is to set the date > manually every boot.
How about automatically? If you can network them you can set one computer up (one with Y2K compliance, and/or one that will not be shutdown) to be a local time server, and the rest can query this automatically on start up via /etc/init.d/ntpdate. If they can't/won't be networked, then you'll have to query the user for time manually nga. Ouch. --> Jijo -- Federico Sevilla III :: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Network Administrator :: The Leather Collection, Inc. GnuPG Key: http://jijo.leathercollection.ph/jijo.gpg _ Philippine Linux Users Group. Web site and archives at http://plug.linux.org.ph To leave: send "unsubscribe" in the body to [EMAIL PROTECTED] To subscribe to the Linux Newbies' List: send "subscribe" in the body to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
