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Hi, Jeff: Well, that's where I was going next, actually, but Bruce (btw, thanks for the nice feedback, man) beat us both to it. NTP has been available for many, many years. In fact (probably) the very atomic clock that feeds your clock at home is responsible for maintaining many of the systems out there in (inter)network land, around the world. But I've probably chosen a bad soapbox here. Probably at least part of the reason IBM is so very successful with their AS/400 marketing, and the reason that NT, Unix and all the others are doing so poorly, is that IBM is holding to their older, proven approach. Who needs all that newfangled technology and ease of operation, anyway? Yeah, yeah. Now I'm beginning to understand. Don't you think? :) Dennis Jeff Bull <Jeff.Bull@itm-group.co.uk>@midrange.com on 10/25/2002 10:57:47 AM Please respond to midrange-l@midrange.com Sent by: midrange-l-admin@midrange.com To: "'midrange-l@midrange.com'" <midrange-l@midrange.com> cc: Subject: RE: With the upcoming time change.... ... what would be even more useful ... I have a relatively inexpensive clock at home that checks a specific radio frequency periodically, from where it can receive the time accurately from an atomic clock; it keeps itself adjusted perfectly all year, daylight-saving changes too. Now a similar device could be installed in a computer I'm sure, or perhaps even better, attached to a network for all servers and clients to synchronise their internal clocks to. I would find it difficult to believe that such a gadget would not sell, or perhaps it has already been invented, but the poor inventor gave the marketing contract to the same company responsible for the iSeries :-) Jeff Bull
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