- Jun 28, 2001
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Okay, here's an interesting one:
Back in February, I installed Linux, which is notorious for not being able to manage the system clock. It was always off by like 5 minutes or so. Whatever. So I stopped using Linux for whatever reason, and went back to XP. I didn't reinstall XP, I went back to the same XP install that used to have a properly functioning clock. However, now the XP clock exhibits the same problem as the Linux clock: set it, and 5 minutes later it is off by 10 seconds already! I know Linux cannot be affecting the clock if I am not running it, so what happened that my clock used to work fine and it is now borked to hell?
Any help is appreciated.
-Tghh
Back in February, I installed Linux, which is notorious for not being able to manage the system clock. It was always off by like 5 minutes or so. Whatever. So I stopped using Linux for whatever reason, and went back to XP. I didn't reinstall XP, I went back to the same XP install that used to have a properly functioning clock. However, now the XP clock exhibits the same problem as the Linux clock: set it, and 5 minutes later it is off by 10 seconds already! I know Linux cannot be affecting the clock if I am not running it, so what happened that my clock used to work fine and it is now borked to hell?
Any help is appreciated.
-Tghh