The way that I have my system set up is the hardware clock is set to GMT
and my /etc/sysconfig/clock looks like this:
ZONE="America/New_York"
UTC=true
ARC=false
I'm in the New York area so this works for me. Take note of the UTC usage.
UTC will set the software clock (OS level) to an offset of
On Fri, 2003-07-18 at 22:56, Edward Dekkers wrote:
>
>
> Kevin Breit wrote:
>
> > On Fri, 2003-07-18 at 02:18, Edward Dekkers wrote:
> >
> >>If it's always a few hours - the wrong timezone is more than likely set,
> >>or the UTC option is set incorrectly.
> >
> >
> > How can I check what the
Kevin Breit wrote:
On Fri, 2003-07-18 at 02:18, Edward Dekkers wrote:
If it's always a few hours - the wrong timezone is more than likely set,
or the UTC option is set incorrectly.
How can I check what the UTC is set to?
Thanks
Kevin Breit
I knew you were going to ask me that - but someone
On Fri, 2003-07-18 at 02:18, Edward Dekkers wrote:
> If it's always a few hours - the wrong timezone is more than likely set,
> or the UTC option is set incorrectly.
How can I check what the UTC is set to?
Thanks
Kevin Breit
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Kevin Breit wrote:
Hey,
Whenever I turn off my computer, the clock seems to get set back a few
hours. I thought this was a hardware problem until I took the hard disk
out and threw it in another laptop. The same issue happens here, so
it's a software problem. What can I do to fix this?
Hey,
Whenever I turn off my computer, the clock seems to get set back a few
hours. I thought this was a hardware problem until I took the hard disk
out and threw it in another laptop. The same issue happens here, so
it's a software problem. What can I do to fix this? I'm using Red Hat
8