Hi FJP, It's good to hear from you. The Debian download page asks users to fill out an installation report even when the installation goes well. (And I think this installation went very well--I'm actually very happy with the overall experience) so I was just trying to follow through with that. Otherwise I wouldn't ever have complained about something so minor (and, as I think about it more in retrospect, likely unrelated to the Debian installation software.)
I installed onto an old (but completely reformatted) hard drive on a motherboard I had been using as my home desktop computer (dual boot Win2k and a different Linux distro.) Under normal use, this system keeps correct system time (right on the motherboard, perhaps sometimes with the assistance of the battery installed there.) Reading your description and thinking a bit more, the best thing I can think of is my computer was unplugged from all external connections (including power) for several days, about one day before I did the installation. When I go out of town, I unplug everything connected to my computer system--even the cable modem just to be on the safe side, especially as we approach thunderstorm season here in the midwest. Note my motherboard is now several years old, so I can't comment as to the reliability of its battery. Anyway, this is the best I can think of. todd On Wed, 2007-04-18 at 13:37 +0200, Frans Pop wrote: > > Minor quirk: the time was set to some > > peculiar value, some non-integral number of hours off from my system > > time setting before the installation. I don't consider this serious at > > all, just following up on the "E" entry above. > > That's weird as the installer does not touch the hardware clock at all. It > only sets if the clock is set to UTC or local time (in most cases it > automatically selects this) and the timezone. > > Any ideas what may have happened? > > Cheers, > FJP -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]