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msg
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      31st Mar 2010
Every few days the clock on my computer jumps back exactly one hour. Each
time, I manually reset the correct time. I have the right time zone, date,
etc. I have XP. Can anyone tell me whats happening every few days to make
this happen?
 
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db
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      31st Mar 2010
maybe the machine
thinks it is a different
time/zone.

you should double
check it.

right click on clock>
properties>zone

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"msg" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:9D2B1449-188B-4932-AC7C-(E-Mail Removed)...
> Every few days the clock on my computer jumps back exactly one hour. Each
> time, I manually reset the correct time. I have the right time zone, date,
> etc. I have XP. Can anyone tell me whats happening every few days to make
> this happen?


 
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Ken Blake, MVP
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      31st Mar 2010
On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 22:47:01 -0700, msg
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

> Every few days the clock on my computer jumps back exactly one hour. Each
> time, I manually reset the correct time. I have the right time zone, date,
> etc. I have XP. Can anyone tell me whats happening every few days to make
> this happen?



But you probably don't have it set properly to use DST.


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Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003
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John Wunderlich
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      31st Mar 2010
=?Utf-8?B?bXNn?= <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
news:9D2B1449-188B-4932-AC7C-(E-Mail Removed):

> Every few days the clock on my computer jumps back exactly one
> hour. Each time, I manually reset the correct time. I have the
> right time zone, date, etc. I have XP. Can anyone tell me whats
> happening every few days to make this happen?


Probably your System has not been updated to use the newer dates for
the switch to Daylight Savings time (now occurs in March instead of the
first Sunday in April). Despite your setting your clock, your system
is going on the network and resetting your clock to a time server
somewhere on the network.

A couple things you can do:

o Update your computer to recognize current Time Zone dates:
"August 2009 cumulative time zone update for Microsoft Windows
operating systems"
<http://support.microsoft.com/kb/970653>

o Stop the service that sets your computer to network server time
Start->Run-> w32tm /unregister

o Wait until next Sunday when your computer should switch to Daylight
time - at which time you will be in sync with the world again.

HTH,
John
 
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Fuzzy
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      1st Apr 2010
On 3/31/2010 01:47 AM, msg wrote:
> Every few days the clock on my computer jumps back exactly one hour. Each
> time, I manually reset the correct time. I have the right time zone, date,
> etc. I have XP. Can anyone tell me whats happening every few days to make
> this happen?

Do you have the latest dst update from Microsoft updates. If you do then
I would change the CMOS battery on the motherboard, it is a large button
battery usually a 2032 button battery or equivalent.
 
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Ken Blake, MVP
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      1st Apr 2010
On Wed, 31 Mar 2010 22:41:34 -0400, Fuzzy <(E-Mail Removed)>
wrote:

> On 3/31/2010 01:47 AM, msg wrote:
> > Every few days the clock on my computer jumps back exactly one hour. Each
> > time, I manually reset the correct time. I have the right time zone, date,
> > etc. I have XP. Can anyone tell me whats happening every few days to make
> > this happen?

> Do you have the latest dst update from Microsoft updates. If you do then
> I would change the CMOS battery on the motherboard, it is a large button
> battery usually a 2032 button battery or equivalent.



The problem is definitely *not* the battery. There are two reasons why
that's so:

1. "Exactly one hour" would not occur of it were the battery. The
change would vary and it never be exactly anything.

2. The battery is used only when the computer is powered off. A
battery problem would manifest itself only when the computer was
powered on. It wouldn't occur while the computer was running.


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Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003
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