On Wed, 2004-09-22 at 11:36, Matthew Saltzman wrote: > If you are running Linux with the hardware clock set > to LOCAL at the time change, then Linux will make the change successfully. > If you then reboot to Windows, Linux updates the hardware clock on > shutdown. When you next boot into Windows, it will realize that it's the > first boot since the change and adjust software and hardware clocks again. > Now you are an hour off in Windows, and when you boot Linux, it assumes > the hardware clock has the correct local time, so you're an hour off there > too. > You are, of course, correct. I should have said that you can get things to be correct in both OS's, and reboot to either at will, by setting the time to local on both sides. This will work 363 days per year... and twice per year, you'll get thrown off. I do not know of a "perfect" way to keep both clocks correct, showing local time, and not upsetting each other. I just consider two time corrections per year the "necessary evil" of dual-booting. :-( Cheers, -- Rodolfo J. Paiz <rpaiz@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Simpaticus.com