Thanks
I will try this right away
I received the following as a Private Message, and it seems like a useful general question for the forum. It's posted here without attribution, as I don't have the sender's permission.
It's easily done, with root permissions. First set the System Time (from the lxterm):I think i accidentally set the clock incorrectly... now i don't know how to change it back >.<You'll probably want to set the TimeZone as well as the time where you live. The sudo means that the system admin ("root") is authorizing this, rather than a less-privileged user ("knoppix"). Second, set the Hardware Clock to the System Clock time:Code:sudo time-adminThis will cause the system to keep the clock setting from the current session in future "boots."Code:sudo hwclock -w or sudo hwclock --systohc
Cheers!
Krishna
Last edited by krishna.murphy; 07-25-2010 at 03:03 PM. Reason: Clarity
Thanks
I will try this right away
hmm... it says... time-admin: command not found... hwclock works... tho... still trying to set to the correct time zone...
$ ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/America/Los_Angeles /etc/localtime
this worked !!!! haha... didn't think of using a command line to fix it... thought there would be some kind of UI for that >.<
private messages don't reach me as I don't read them.
Extron RGB-160XI Analog Computer Video 60-378-01
$187.06
The analog thing modern open source, educational, low-cost analog computer
$800.00
Vintage 1960s Donner Model 3000 Analog Computer ~ MUSEUM PIECE Extremely Rare
$4000.00
NEW Aquarius+ Computer Signature Edition - 8Bit Retro System
$229.00
Apple Macintosh SE/30 M5119 Computer 8MB RAM Recapped Working *See Description*
$475.00
Apple IIc Analog Board NOS - 661-0265
$74.00
IBM Modem Saver Phone Line Tester
$7.99
Landen Computer. Circa 1898. the Rapid Computer Company. With Original Case.
$425.00
ACASIS PCIE Capture Card HDMI 1.4 1080P60HZ PCIE 2.0 X4 20Gbps for Video Capture
$248.99
MultiTech FaxFinder FF240 Windows Fax Server SKU92500751LF Analog 1N22860#3
$139.49