Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
> huw wrote:
> >On Sat, 2013-06-29 at 07:55 +0100, huw wrote:
> >> I'd restarted my PC, then put it into suspend. This morning I woke
> >it
> >> up, loaded Evolution, and it promptly downloaded all the mail in my
> >> inbox again, as if it had never been there (via an I
On Sat, 2013-06-29 at 07:55 +0100, huw wrote:
> I'd restarted my PC, then put it into suspend. This morning I woke it
> up, loaded Evolution, and it promptly downloaded all the mail in my
> inbox again, as if it had never been there (via an IMAP account). I
> hadn't fiddled with any settings or d
Hi :)
Actually most problems seem to magically disappear whenever you move away from
relying on any MS system. Wrt virtualisation you move away from MS directly
interacting with "bare metal" and give it an idealised, abstracted environment.
Also it's no longer depending on a real ntfs file-sys
Hi :)
I think Windows Server has a different way of counting time that gradually gets
it out-of-sync with the rest of the world. On our network we have to reset the
Windows Server clock about 1/year. Just after it becomes around 10mins out of
sync with reality the various desktops authentifica
On Sat, 2013-06-29 at 07:55 +0100, huw wrote:
> I'd restarted my PC, then put it into suspend. This morning I woke it
> up, loaded Evolution, and it promptly downloaded all the mail in my
> inbox again, as if it had never been there (via an IMAP account). I
> hadn't fiddled with any settings or d
On Sun, 2013-06-30 at 18:50 -0400, Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
> Possibly dual-booting between different operating systems is trashing your
> clock. Windows stashes the system time in your local time zone and LINUX
> stashes the system time in UTC. So you are probably time-warping forward and
huw wrote:
>On Sat, 2013-06-29 at 07:55 +0100, huw wrote:
>> I'd restarted my PC, then put it into suspend. This morning I woke
>it
>> up, loaded Evolution, and it promptly downloaded all the mail in my
>> inbox again, as if it had never been there (via an IMAP account). I
>> hadn't fiddled with
On Sat, 2013-06-29 at 07:55 +0100, huw wrote:
> I'd restarted my PC, then put it into suspend. This morning I woke it
> up, loaded Evolution, and it promptly downloaded all the mail in my
> inbox again, as if it had never been there (via an IMAP account). I
> hadn't fiddled with any settings or
I'd restarted my PC, then put it into suspend. This morning I woke it
up, loaded Evolution, and it promptly downloaded all the mail in my
inbox again, as if it had never been there (via an IMAP account). I
hadn't fiddled with any settings or deleted anything beforehand.
Why did it do this?
Rega