Mark Misulich wrote:
James Knott wrote:
Mark Misulich wrote:
Hi Mark.
You may want to check your clock. It appears all your messages were sent in March.
Hi, thanks to all who sent me messages telling me that my clock was off by date. I loaded KDE 4 yesterday so I could start to get used to using it. It looks like it messed up my date and time settings on kde3 &4. I just found that the box for "use local timezone" was set by default in kde4 and instead of using US eastern time it tried to use the timezone that I was in (but yesterday, not in March, go figure) . The time kept reverting to March whenever I reset it, but now will reset to the current date and time after unchecking this box. It still won't set to the proper time on boot when the checkbox on kde3 is checked for "set date and time automatically." Any thoughts on this would be appreciated, but the most immediate concern is described in the next paragraph. <snip> Mark
I had the same problem with gnome and time. In yast I set the time to be controlled by ntp, starting at boot time and using random servers. No more problems today. The kernel shutdown was setting the hardware clock to system time; so, if the system was wrong at shutdown, the cmos clock set it back wrong on startup. Ntp seems to have eliminated that cycle. Ed -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org