Remove the motherboard's battery for a few minutes to allow the circuitry to reset itself. If you have a voltmeter, check whether the battery's voltage is still within acceptable limits: for a 3V battery, 2V is not acceptable. If you can, connect a low resistance across the battery or temporarily short circuit it before measuring its voltage. Worn out batteries take more time to recover from high current surges.
Edward On 22/09/2015, aitor_czr <aitor_...@gnuinos.org> wrote: > Yes, > > # ntpdate -u hora.roa.es > > But the hour changes itself frecuently. Sometimes i can't access to the > clock of the BIOS. In this sorts of cases 'date' works, but not 'hwclock'. > > Patience :) > > Aitor. > > El 22/09/15 21:02, Didier Kryn <k...@in2p3.fr> escribió: >> No ntp server around? >> >> Didier >> >> Le 22/09/2015 14:05, aitor_czr a écrit : >>> >Sorry, my clock is changing again with different hard disks and >>> >different operating systems. >>> > >>> >... I saw it timestamping "debian/changelog" in netman-package... >>> > >>> >I can't be using hwclock every few minutes. I will not send more posts >>> >from this computer until discover the reason. >>> > >>> >Sorry again, >>> > >>> >Aitor. >>> > >>> >El 17/09/15 a las 19:51, Peter Olson escribió: >>>>> >>>On February 24, 2032 at 3:32 PM aitor_czr<aitor_...@gnuinos.org> >>>>> >>> wrote: >>>> >>Your last few messages have had Date: lines far in the future. >>>> >> >>>> >>Check your clock! >>>> >> >>>> >>Peter Olson > > _______________________________________________ Dng mailing list Dng@lists.dyne.org https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng