Technical explanations aside, some sort of clock drift exists in all computers. My experience with Sun hardware, for instance, was that the hardware and software clocks rarely agreed. You should set up your machines to use some sort of time synchronization software, such as ntp or rdate. When I didn't have a 24/7 net presence, I had my ppp script run ntpdate when the connection was complete. See http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~ntp/ - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
- [OT] Major Clock Drift Josh Myer
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drift Manfred Bartz
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drift Michael B. Trausch
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drift Steve Underwood
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drift Hacksaw
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drift Alan Chandler
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drift Tom Eastep
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drift Hacksaw
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drift Tom Eastep
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drift Andrew Morton
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drift Pavel Machek
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drift Andrew Morton
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drif... Pavel Machek
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drif... Andrew Morton
- Re: [OT] Major Clock Drif... Peter Horton