Yes for windows atomtime.  I got it on a Pc World shareware disc.  It is
shareware.  It syncs your clock and stuff.  I've since uninstalled it though, not
because it wasn't good but I had to remove clutter.

Jim Cunning wrote:

> There's also an NT (shareware, I think) program called "atomtime" that
> will talk to a time server, configurable.
>
> Jim Cunning
>
> On Thu, 9 Mar 2000, Anthony E. Greene wrote:
>
> > Ward William E PHDN wrote:
> > > It works almost flawlessly... the signals are in sync, and I can't see
> > > any apparent differences in those machines.  Of course, now I need
> > > to sync these stupid NT boxes in....
> >
> > How about using NT's "at" command to setup a regularly scheduled job to sync
> > the NT boxes to your time server:
> >
> >    NET TIME /SET /YES \\timeserver
> >
> > It's not cron, but it ships with the OS and it works.
> >
> > Tony
> > --
> >  Anthony E. Greene <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >  Homepage & PGP Key <http://www.pobox.com/~agreene/>
> >  If it's too good to be true, it's probably Linux.
> >
> >
> > --
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> >
>
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