Mailinglist Archive: opensuse (2324 mails)
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Re: [opensuse] Time & Date
- From: ianseeks <ianseeks@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 10 Nov 2009 08:08:41 +0000
- Message-id: <200911100808.41695.ianseeks@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
On Friday 06 Nov 2009 17:39:29 Mark Misulich wrote:
Do you have battery backup on the motherboard? If so, is it flat?
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On Sat, 2009-11-07 at 01:19 +0900, Masaru Nomiya wrote:Not sure what I'm talking about here, probably info from a million moons ago.
Hello,
In the Message;
Subject : [opensuse] Time & Date
Message-ID : <1257522461.5320.4.camel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date & Time: Fri, 06 Nov 2009 10:47:41 -0500
[Mark] == Mark Misulich <munguanaweza@xxxxxxxxx> has written:
Mark> Each time after starting up the computer I have to reset the time
and Mark> date. I also uncheck the box where it says update time
automatically. Mark> But after each startup, the date and time will be
off, and the box is Mark> rechecked again
What do you want to do, I wonder?
The box do update time and date automatically under the ntp setteings.
I can't understand waht does your uncheck behavior.
Regards,
---
┏━━┓彡 野宮 賢 mail-to: nomiya @ galaxy.dti.ne.jp
┃\/彡
┗━━┛ 「先端技術の開発は、優れた頭脳を持つ人間が集中しないと成功しない。
しかし、技術開発と、それが何をもたらすかを考えることは別だ。
一人の人間に二つは望めない。」 -- M. Crichton --
Hi,
what I want to do is get the time working correctly again. I do not
expect to have to reset time and date on each startup.
If the autoset box is checked, I would expect the clock and date to be
set correctly, but it isn't. I tried to uncheck the autoset box as a
trouble shooting exercise, but since it isn't staying unchecked it is
one more indication of the problem. That is why I wrote about this.
Do you have battery backup on the motherboard? If so, is it flat?
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