Jerry J. Haumberger wrote:
> The program I use is shareware that I've used for several
> years to dial into that atomic clock in Boulder, Colorado,
> on a weekly basis to always keep my time correct within
> seconds. It is called PCCLOCK, and if I'm not mistaken,
> it's still available somewhere on a website or one of the
> major DOS repositories (Simtel, Garbo). The version I'm
> using is v3.05 from 1991, 1993, by M. J. Sadaway. You
> should be able to find it easily by searching Yahoo for it
> with this information.
I finally got the wattcp app. NTIME to work and I'm happy
with that so far, but I'll have a look just to see what
something else looks like. The wattcp apps are publilic
domain though.... hard to beat the price. <g>
> I recall that it cost me about
> $15.00. I'm not certain, though, how it will work after
> the year 2000 rolls over. If it doesn't work properly
> after that, I'm sure there's other shareware/freeware
It seems to me that the program should just grab the
information presented to it, so I can't see there being
any Y2K rollover problems on the client end.
> programs out there for DOS that will do so. I'd look for
> you now, but I don't want to do any web browsing on
> vacation using long distance expenses (and my connection
> here is not that fast or secure -- but it's ok and fun to
> try out e-mail with my Toshiba notebook away from home
Sounds like fun!
> C:\>________j_e_r_r_y__j__h_a_u_m_b_e_r_g_e_r________
> C:\>__an_advocate_of_sensible_cli_operating_systems__
>
> -*- Time is change -- a mathematical convenience.
Time is to keep everyting from happening at once! <g>
Cheers,
Ole Juul
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