Good morning,
*********** REPLY SEPARATOR ***********
On 20-Jan-07 at 09:36 Mike Suhar wrote:
>Not so. Even Windows time service uses UTC so the local PC must have the
>time zone set correctly for the hour to be correct. If this was not the
>case
>PC in remote offices that sync with our Ohio based domain controller would
>only get eastern time. I don't think our California based employees would
>take to kindly to that.
What I'm getting at is that (as one example) all the systems on our
network are configured to set their clock according to NTP broadcast messages
that are sent from the time server (a Symmetricom/TrueTime NTS-200) on our LAN.
This means that our systems will listen for, and set themselves to,
whatever the 200 puts out as a time message, no matter what time of year it is.
It is easily possible to disable the automated DST changeover on both Windows
and *nix-based systems.
So: Given that, and assuming a similar configuration, I still believe
that many places will only need to make sure their time server is set correctly.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Bruce Lane, Owner & Head Hardware Heavy,
Blue Feather Technologies -- http://www.bluefeathertech.com
kyrrin (at) bluefeathertech do/t c=o=m
"If Salvador Dali had owned a computer, would it have been equipped with
surreal ports?"
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