Richard B. Gilbert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> By constrast, a Windows clock keeps local >> time. If you transport a Windows computer from Los Angeles to New >> York, you normally tell the kernel to change its clock by 3 hours. If >> you transport a Unix system, you don't. You just tell the various >> programs that report the kernel's time that you'd like to see it in >> EST now. >>
> Maybe YOU reset the Windows clock that way. Windows does have the > facility to specify a time zone and at least some of us use that > facility to set the correct time zone for the zone we happen to be in. I believe "specify a time zone" and "tell the kernel to change its clock" are equivalent on Windows. Yes? -- Darren Dunham [EMAIL PROTECTED] Senior Technical Consultant TAOS http://www.taos.com/ Got some Dr Pepper? San Francisco, CA bay area < This line left intentionally blank to confuse you. > _______________________________________________ questions mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ntp.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/questions
