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On Sat, Jun 20, 2015 at 12:27:59PM +, Curt wrote:
> On 2015-06-20, wrote:
> >
> > And the script is linked in /etc/rc[06].d to stop. So with SysV, at
> > least, things are set up to update the hwclock at shutdown.
>
> I guess that settles it the
On 2015-06-20, wrote:
>
> And the script is linked in /etc/rc[06].d to stop. So with SysV, at
> least, things are set up to update the hwclock at shutdown.
I guess that settles it then. I do find the wiki and debian doc a little
misleading. I do also remember having to us "hwclock" by my lonesom
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On Sat, Jun 20, 2015 at 09:53:47AM +, Curt wrote:
> On 2015-06-19, Nick wrote:
> > On 17/06/15 17:56, Curt wrote:
> >> That's strange; I always thought you had to set the hardware clock
> >> (hwclock) for the modified date and time to survive a re
On 2015-06-20, Gene Heskett wrote:
>
> Most folks keep the hardware clock on GMT, and then the automatic
> translations of tzdata govern the local clock.
True, but irrelevant to the question at hand.
> Cheers, Gene Heskett
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wi
On Saturday 20 June 2015 05:53:47 Curt wrote:
> On 2015-06-19, Nick wrote:
> > On 17/06/15 17:56, Curt wrote:
> >> That's strange; I always thought you had to set the hardware clock
> >> (hwclock) for the modified date and time to survive a reboot.
> >
> > I always thought the current time on th
On 2015-06-19, Nick wrote:
> On 17/06/15 17:56, Curt wrote:
>> That's strange; I always thought you had to set the hardware clock
>> (hwclock) for the modified date and time to survive a reboot.
>>
>>
>
> I always thought the current time on the system clock was saved back to
> the hardware cloc
On Friday 19 June 2015 21:03:44 Nick wrote:
> On 17/06/15 17:56, Curt wrote:
> > That's strange; I always thought you had to set the hardware clock
> > (hwclock) for the modified date and time to survive a reboot.
>
> I always thought the current time on the system clock was saved back to
> the har
On 17/06/15 17:56, Curt wrote:
> That's strange; I always thought you had to set the hardware clock
> (hwclock) for the modified date and time to survive a reboot.
>
>
I always thought the current time on the system clock was saved back to
the hardware clock again during shutdown too.
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To U
Curt wrote:
On 2015-06-17, Bob Proulx wrote:
For example, to set the time and date to 15:00 on 1st February 2014:
sudo date 020115002014
That worked - it took effect after a reboot.
That's strange; I always thought you had to set the hardware clock
(hwclock) for the modified date and
On 2015-06-17, Bob Proulx wrote:
>
>> >> For example, to set the time and date to 15:00 on 1st February 2014:
>> >> sudo date 020115002014
>> >
>> > That worked - it took effect after a reboot.
>>
>> That's strange; I always thought you had to set the hardware clock
>> (hwclock) for the modifi
Curt wrote:
> Richard Owlett wrote:
> >> For example, to set the time and date to 15:00 on 1st February 2014:
> >> sudo date 020115002014
> >
> > That worked - it took effect after a reboot.
>
> That's strange; I always thought you had to set the hardware clock
> (hwclock) for the modified dat
On 2015-06-17, Richard Owlett wrote:
>> For example, to set the time and date to 15:00 on 1st February 2014:
>>
>> sudo date 020115002014
>
> That worked - it took effect after a reboot.
>
That's strange; I always thought you had to set the hardware clock
(hwclock) for the modified date and
Jape Person wrote:
On 06/16/2015 02:08 PM, Richard Owlett wrote:
I just did a clean install of Jessie w Mate DE
1. How do I use file manager with root privileges?
man pkexec
Interesting. Will do further reading.
Or you could invoke the file manager via gksu. That application
(gksu) is pro
Nick wrote:
On 16/06/15 19:08, Richard Owlett wrote:
I just did a clean install of Jessie w Mate DE
Note all the examples below assume you have sudo enabled (the default if
you left the root password prompts blank during installation) and that
you're logged in as the initial user or another on
On 06/16/2015 02:08 PM, Richard Owlett wrote:
I just did a clean install of Jessie w Mate DE
1. How do I use file manager with root privileges?
man pkexec
Or you could invoke the file manager via gksu. That application
(gksu) is probably not installed by default with your DE.
I probably do
On 16/06/15 19:08, Richard Owlett wrote:
> I just did a clean install of Jessie w Mate DE
Note all the examples below assume you have sudo enabled (the default if
you left the root password prompts blank during installation) and that
you're logged in as the initial user or another one set up with
I just did a clean install of Jessie w Mate DE
1. How do I use file manager with root privileges?
2. How do I manually (no network physically available) reset the
clock?
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