RE: [Declude.JunkMail] Year 2020

2003-03-28 Thread David Stavert
Before you reset the time have a look at what the stock market is doing
and make some really informed buying decisions. Perhaps, considering how
things are today you might just want to stay in the future.


David 


  
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Scott MacLean
Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2003 1:35 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [Declude.JunkMail] Year 2020


The best program I have ever found that does this is D4Time. I like it
so much I replaced my own home-grown written program with it. It's
small, extremely accurate, and reliable. You can set it to run every xx
minutes, stay resident, run only at boot and exit, whatever you want.
And it's absolutely free. /plug off

http://www.thinkman.com/dimension4/index.html

At 02:16 PM 3/27/2003, Colbeck, Andrew wrote:


 I had a program that checked a time server every day to keep the time
 accurate. On more than one occasion I saw the date get changed to the
 year 2020 and the year 4040. I don't use time server programs any
more.

WXP has a SNTP client built in.  Use:

net time /setsntp:tick.ucla.edu
net stop w32time
net start w32time

and you're in business.

WNT and W2K can both use the (totally different) w32time.exe and
w32time.ini
from the NT Server Resource Kit.

For dollars, my favourite is the inexpensive shareware Tardis2000 from
HC
Mingham-Smith at:

http://www.kaska.demon.co.uk/

Run a NTP server internally against an internet source, and then provide
it
to your servers and clients, either with a time service, or by putting a

net time \\server /set /yes

line in your login scripts.  You can also use net time in your login
scripts to obtain the time from the NT Domain.  DHCP also allows you to
publish a time server, but Windows DHCP clients ignore that feature.

And of course, tick.ucla.edu is not the only time source on the
Internet.
There's probably a source that is near you that is a public source.
Use
more than one.  Here's one page that is a useful list:

http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/ntp.html

Andrew 8)

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___
Scott MacLean
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 9184011
http://www.nerosoft.com

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RE: [Declude.JunkMail] Year 2020

2003-03-27 Thread Darrell LaRock
I have seen random date changes when the battery that powers the RTC
(Real Time Clock) on the MB goes bad..  However, I have only seen this
in really old computers.

Darrell


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Karl Hentschel
Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2003 11:46 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Declude.JunkMail] Year 2020

I don't know if this is the right place for this question, but I'm
looking
for some feedback. The date has randomly changed to the year 2020 on our
mail server. This has happened twice now. Has anybody ever heard of this
happening before and what might cause it?


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RE: [Declude.JunkMail] Year 2020

2003-03-27 Thread brian

I had a program that checked a time server every day to keep the time
accurate. On more than one occasion I saw the date get changed to the year
2020 and the year 4040. I don't use time server programs any more.
 
On 03/27/03 12:09pm you wrote...
I have seen random date changes when the battery that powers the RTC
(Real Time Clock) on the MB goes bad..  However, I have only seen this
in really old computers.

Darrell


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Karl Hentschel
Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2003 11:46 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Declude.JunkMail] Year 2020

I don't know if this is the right place for this question, but I'm
looking
for some feedback. The date has randomly changed to the year 2020 on our
mail server. This has happened twice now. Has anybody ever heard of this
happening before and what might cause it?


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RE: [Declude.JunkMail] Year 2020

2003-03-27 Thread Colbeck, Andrew
 I had a program that checked a time server every day to keep the time
 accurate. On more than one occasion I saw the date get changed to the
 year 2020 and the year 4040. I don't use time server programs any more.

WXP has a SNTP client built in.  Use:

net time /setsntp:tick.ucla.edu
net stop w32time
net start w32time

and you're in business.

WNT and W2K can both use the (totally different) w32time.exe and w32time.ini
from the NT Server Resource Kit.

For dollars, my favourite is the inexpensive shareware Tardis2000 from HC
Mingham-Smith at:

http://www.kaska.demon.co.uk/

Run a NTP server internally against an internet source, and then provide it
to your servers and clients, either with a time service, or by putting a

net time \\server /set /yes

line in your login scripts.  You can also use net time in your login
scripts to obtain the time from the NT Domain.  DHCP also allows you to
publish a time server, but Windows DHCP clients ignore that feature.

And of course, tick.ucla.edu is not the only time source on the Internet.
There's probably a source that is near you that is a public source.  Use
more than one.  Here's one page that is a useful list:

http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/ntp.html

Andrew 8)

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RE: [Declude.JunkMail] Year 2020

2003-03-27 Thread Scott MacLean

The best program I have ever found that does this is D4Time.
I like it so much I replaced my own home-grown written program with it.
It's small, extremely accurate, and reliable. You can set it to run every
xx minutes, stay resident, run only at boot and exit, whatever you want.
And it's absolutely free. /plug off
http://www.thinkman.com/dimension4/index.html
At 02:16 PM 3/27/2003, Colbeck, Andrew wrote:
 I had a program that checked a
time server every day to keep the time
 accurate. On more than one occasion I saw the date get changed to
the
 year 2020 and the year 4040. I don't use time server programs any
more.
WXP has a SNTP client built in. Use:
net time /setsntp:tick.ucla.edu
net stop w32time
net start w32time
and you're in business.
WNT and W2K can both use the (totally different) w32time.exe and
w32time.ini
from the NT Server Resource Kit.
For dollars, my favourite is the inexpensive shareware Tardis2000 from
HC
Mingham-Smith at:
http://www.kaska.demon.co.uk/
Run a NTP server internally against an internet source, and then provide
it
to your servers and clients, either with a time service, or by putting
a
net time \\server /set /yes
line in your login scripts. You can also use net time
in your login
scripts to obtain the time from the NT Domain. DHCP also allows you
to
publish a time server, but Windows DHCP clients ignore that
feature.
And of course, tick.ucla.edu is not the only time source on the
Internet.
There's probably a source that is near you that is a public
source. Use
more than one. Here's one page that is a useful list:
http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/ntp.html
Andrew 8)
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http://www.mail-archive.com.

___
Scott MacLean
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 9184011
http://www.nerosoft.com