have the same problem. Everytime I boot Suse10, I get a coincidentally time. Mostly it is between 30 minutes to 5 hours in future. It doesn't depent on time zones, because it is not exactly a full or half hour shift. In the moment the clock is 70 minutes in front. BIOS clock at boot time was correct. I just checked it. And about dual boot, I have a Win XP installed, but I use it less than once a month, but Linux every day. I thought it is a hardware problem on my PC, but seems, I'm not the only one with this problem. Alois opensuse@opensuse.org schrieb am 13.11.05 12:10:05:
Stan Glasoe wrote:
On Saturday 12 November 2005 3:01 pm, jim wrote:
Stan Glasoe wrote:
On Saturday 11 December 2004 6:32 am, jim wrote:
Why is it everytime you boot into Suse10, that the time is different, the time zone doesn't change.
Jim
Check your date too... You're about 11 months behind.
Stan
yes, that to.
jim
But to really answer your question I'd say since this is based on SUSE 10.0 it should really got to the suse-linux-e list. That's for the released version Q & A, support, etc. openSUSE is the project for the current alpha/beta build that hasn't been released yet.
If this is a multi boot system and Windows is an OS you boot to then setting your system time to localtime versus UTC might help.
Stan
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It is set to local time.
jim
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Hello, Am Montag, 5. Dezember 2005 18:42 schrieb AloisLevermann@web.de:
have the same problem. Everytime I boot Suse10, I get a coincidentally time. Mostly it is between 30 minutes to 5 hours in future.
Try acpi=off as boot parameter, it has helped in some cases. http://lists.suse.com/archive/suse-linux/2005-Sep/0977.html And please do not send fullquotes. http://www.opensuse.org/Opensuse_mailing_list_netiquette#Learn_to_quote ;-) Regards, Christian Boltz -- und *echte* Männer benutzen Linux -- wegen der langen Kommandozeilen ("Meine ist länger als deine!"). Dann muss man nicht mehr Krieg spielen, um zu zeigen, wie hart man ist. -- S. Lauterkorn in suse-talk
On Monday 05 December 2005 11:42 am, AloisLevermann@web.de wrote:
have the same problem. Everytime I boot Suse10, I get a coincidentally time. Mostly it is between 30 minutes to 5 hours in future. It doesn't depent on time zones, because it is not exactly a full or half hour shift. In the moment the clock is 70 minutes in front. BIOS clock at boot time was correct. I just checked it. And about dual boot, I have a Win XP installed, but I use it less than once a month, but Linux every day. I thought it is a hardware problem on my PC, but seems, I'm not the only one with this problem.
Alois
What is your hardware clock set to in YaST, System. Date & Time? Most often I've found it necessary to have that set to "local time" if you ever multi-boot with any version of MS Windows. Stan
participants (3)
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AloisLevermann@web.de
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Christian Boltz
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Stan Glasoe