"Apan" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:E2DB0E3B-4057-4EF8-BC81-(E-Mail Removed)...
> The computer clock suddenly decided to go slow.
> I took my computer to lacal Best Buy to check for sound card. I unplugged
> the machine and took it to the store and I was told at the store that my
> hard
> drive was not working. The machine had no problem prior to unplugging the
> machine.
You probably never turned it off before. Standby or hibernate is not off,
despite XP's selections under turn computer off.
> This machine is locally built. I took the machine back to the person who
> built it and he found out the C-drive was disabled.
Uhh, the hard drive where your windows partition (c

is installed was not
enabled. Windows calls partitions drives. The bios refers to the physical
hard drive, not a partition.
> After correcting that I came back home and then I found the date and time
> is
> at May 2005.
> I had reset the closck using time.windows.com. Still the clock is going
> slow. Now I can not connect to time.windows or nist for update.
Me smells something amiss. If you took the PC home, and the cmos battery
was the cause of losing enabling the hard drive for XP's boot partition,
should have been the same when you got home as well.
> The motherboard is about year old. My understanding is this could happend
> if
> the battery dies. This is the first experience of dying battery since the
> days of Model 3. I guess this could happen. Is this what is happening or
> something else?
Don't know, you may not be relaying enough information based on not having
to reenable the hard drive again in the bios when you got home. Or, you
conveniently left that out for others to ponder aimlessly.
Dave