On Thursday 08 April 2004 04:44 pm, Adam Aube wrote:
>Jeff Elkins wrote:
>> Thanks, unfortunately, that didn't do it. I did install timezoneconf and
>> thought I might try to reconfigure with that. However, I haven't a clue as
>> to how to run it. It's a debconf utility.
>
>dpkg-reconfigure timezon
Jeff Elkins wrote:
> Thanks, unfortunately, that didn't do it. I did install timezoneconf and
> thought I might try to reconfigure with that. However, I haven't a clue as
> to how to run it. It's a debconf utility.
dpkg-reconfigure timezoneconf
Adam
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On Thursday 08 April 2004 04:04 pm, Jeff Elkins wrote:
>On Thursday 08 April 2004 01:00 pm, Adam Aube wrote:
>>Jeff Elkins wrote:
>>> I installed Fedora on a spare partition to play with and when I rebooted
>>> to Debian my time was four hours off. Lo, when I reset the clock to true
>>> local time
On Thursday 08 April 2004 01:00 pm, Adam Aube wrote:
>Jeff Elkins wrote:
>> I installed Fedora on a spare partition to play with and when I rebooted
>> to Debian my time was four hours off. Lo, when I reset the clock to true
>> local time then ran ntpdate my time was bumped up four hours.
>
>Proba
Jeff Elkins wrote:
> I installed Fedora on a spare partition to play with and when I rebooted
> to Debian my time was four hours off. Lo, when I reset the clock to true
> local time then ran ntpdate my time was bumped up four hours.
Probably one thinks the system clock is set to UTC and the othe
I've screwed up the time on my workstation and am confused on how to recover.
I installed Fedora on a spare partition to play with and when I rebooted to
Debian my time was four hours off. Lo, when I reset the clock to true local
time then ran ntpdate my time was bumped up four hours.
Thanks f
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