John
Wed May 14 05:11:23 PDT 2008
Andy wrote:
> On Tue, 13 May 2008 19:00:02 -0700, Mike950
> <Mike950@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
>
>
>>Recently my Windows Date and Time has been acting up. I set the date and
>>time and within four or five hours the time is wrong. Example: "At 1pm I
>>set the time as 1:00 pm. By 5pm the Windows time displays 3:35, almost an
>>hour and a half late. If I don't check it for a day or two, it actually
>>shows the date and time as some time on the previous day. Is this a CMOS
>>battery problem or something else. If it were a Cmos battery problem,
>>wouldn't I be having boot problems (ie: error and boot to BIOS?). Thanks for
>>the help.
>>
>>PS: I thought I posted this this morning but it didn't show up.
>
>
> According to How Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 Handles Internal Time
> <
http://folkworm.ceri.memphis.edu/ew-doc/PROGRAMMER/NTandTime.html>,
> NT 4.0 synchronizes the system time with the CMOS clock every hour,
> though this behavior can be disabled. Whether Windows XP behaves the
> same way, I have no idea.
> What you can try is to set the system time accurately, tne turn off
> the PC. Wait four or five hours, then turn on the PC. If the system
> time is still accurate, then the CMOS clock is working okay.
The Time Service was completely revamped and changed considerably with
the introduction of Windows 2000 and it underwent yet more changes with
the introduction of Windows XP, practically none of the NT4 information
on this subject applies to subsequent NT releases.
How to configure an authoritative time server in Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314054
John