Thanks
Tony
<N> wrote in message news:%23RAvgre...@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
Uhhh, if MS says that's so, what can anyone here tell you? Without SP2 you
have an obsolete and archaic system anyway so why care? Just set the clock
when the time comes.
I can confirm that TZEDIT does indeed work under XP SP2.
By "work" I mean that when I run it, it shows the current status in a
sensible way and lets me edit it. When I close and reopen the
program, the status is as I set it.
The proof of the pudding will come on about 30½ hours. :-)
--
Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA
http://OakRoadSystems.com/
Yes, and no. You can do it yourself, if you are competent enough to fiddle
around in the registry without screwing things up...
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/914387/en-us
...or you can download SP2 and get the hotfix...
This morning I restarted after hibernation, and the EST time was
still in effect. I rebooted, and the EST time was still in effect. I
double-clicked on the time, selected the "Time Zone" tab, and made
sure that "Automatically adjust for Daylight Saving Time" was
checked; it was.
Out of curiosity, I unchecked and rechecked it, then clicked Apply.
There was a pause of nearly a minute, and the time changed to EDT. I
guess it's necessary to uncheck and check that adjustment box after
doing any edits in TZEDIT.
> Out of curiosity, I unchecked and rechecked it, then clicked Apply.
> There was a pause of nearly a minute, and the time changed to EDT. I
> guess it's necessary to uncheck and check that adjustment box after
> doing any edits in TZEDIT.
Yes it is. Using the Date/Time applet to reapply the settings refreshes
the information stored in:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\TimeZoneInformation
If you don't refresh the key it will still contains the old time zone
information and the time changes will not be made as expected.
John