John,

 

Thank you very much for a prompt reply!

 

Vlad

 

________________________________

From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of John
Minyo II
Sent: Thursday, March 01, 2007 11:28 AM
To: RBASE-L Mailing List
Subject: [RBASE-L] - Daylight Saving Time Update (WAS: Re: 7.5 and Win
2000 network)

 

At 08:52 AM 3/1/2007, you wrote:



Did somebody check Rbase compliance with the upcoming Daylight Savings
Time event?
I'm working with very the old version (Rbase 2.11) and have some
concerns.


Dear Vlad,

Even R:BASE 2.11 will recognize your system clock when the
time changes. The key is to make sure the time changes, then 
you have to exit and restart R:BASE.

Daylight Saving Time Background
-------------------------------
Under legislation enacted in 1986, Daylight Saving Time in 
the U.S. began at 2:00 AM on the first Sunday of April and 
ended at 2:00 AM on the last Sunday of October.

But, the Energy Policy Act of 2005 extended Daylight Saving 
Time in the U.S. beginning in 2007 to begin at 2:00 AM on 
the second Sunday of March and end at 2:00 AM on the first 
Sunday of November.

Here in the US, 

Year  DST Begins  DST Ends  
----  ----------  ----------
2003  April 6     October 26 
2004  April 4     October 31 
2005  April 3     October 30 
2006  April 2     October 29 
2007  March 11    November 4 
2008  March 9     November 2 
2009  March 8     November 1 


Personal Computers
------------------
So, how does this effect our computers? Normally, during your 
operating system configuration you are prompted to "Automatically 
adjust clock for daylight saving changes" when selecting your 
time zone region. If this is checked, your computer's time will 
likely not change on March 11 without the latest Microsoft 
Daylight Savings Time Update: 
http://support.microsoft.com/gp/cp_dst

Or, you could simply remove this setting by double clicking on
the operating system clock, selecting the "Time Zone" tab, and
remove the check for "Automatically adjust clock for daylight 
saving changes". Then, on March 11, make sure you change your 
time manually.

Network Installations
---------------------
Network administrators with many computers are likely taking 
advantage of running batch files to control the time on the
workstations. You could run a batch file that sets the time to 
the server time. Then, each workstation will use the correct 
value. The batch file would consist of something like this:

net time \\<server name> /SET /Y
 
The /SET tells the workstation to use the time from the 
\\<server>, and the /Y tells it to answer "YES" to the prompt 
that normally occurs. 

The server time can also be set to update from a Web site server 
that stores an atomic clock value, like the NIST (National 
Institute of Standards and Technology), NASA (National Aeronautics 
and Space Administration), or the U.S. Naval Observatory.
 
NET TIME \\<SERVERNAME> /SETSNTP:<SERVERNAME> /SET /Y
 
The /SETSNTP option tells the computer to stay synchronized ALL 
THE TIME. You'll need to specify a server in your building that 
you want to set to. 

Address for NIST (192.43.244.18)
Address for NASA (128.102.16.2)
Address for U.S. Naval Observatory (192.5.41.40)

Hope this helps!

John

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