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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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Michael A. Terrell writes:
Watches have a trimmer to adjust the frequency, but PC motherboards don't, anymore. Some 286 and 386 motherboards had them, and could be set to give fairly accurate time. I don't really care. I use software that updates the clock from time to time and sets it to a few milliseconds from the atomic clocks at NIST. Even if you have a very accurate clock, you still need to synchronize it with NTP or some similar utility if you are using the Internet. Once you start communicating with other machines, it's vital that all the machines be synchronized with respect to time of day--just having a clock that accurately measures time isn't enough. So if you're on a network, either you must synchronize your machine to the Net with software, or you must have a hardware clock that synchronizes to some external source, such as a GPS or radio-controlled clock. In fact, if your computer is _not_ connected to any other computer, then what you need is a clock that is very stable and accurate in its measurement of time intervals. But if your computer is connected to other computers, this stability and accuracy is far less important than synchronization with the other computers. If you have an isolated PC with a very accurate clock, you can set it by hand, and perhaps it will be within one second of the correct time. However, since the clock is accurate, you can be sure that it will never be _more_ than one second away from the correct time. In other words, the initial error is also the maximum error, and a one-second error is often okay for a stand-alone PC as long as the error never increases. Since the computer is not communicating with anything else, the one-second error is not a problem. If you have a PC connected to other PCs, the most important thing is to have all PCs set to the same time. In theory, it doesn't even matter if they drift, as long as they all stay locked together. So clocks that are fast by a second a day are not a problem, as long as all the clocks are off by the same amount. In the case of multiple connected PCs, then, synchronization with each other takes priority over long term stability with respect to the actual time of day. Finally, if your PC is connected to the Internet, you need synchronization with the "real" time of day, as maintained by atomic clocks around the world. This ensures that your PC will have the same time of day as all the other PCs on the network worldwide (assuming they have accurate clocks). So you need software that synchronizes your PC to the correct time of day. You don't actually need a very accurate clock on the PC, though, because good synchronization software--combined with a good operating system--will continually "discipline" your local clock and ensure that the time of day on your machine precisely matches the actual time of day worldwide. In summary, if you have a PC that is continuously connected to the Internet (broadband, for example), all you need is software that will synchronize the clock regularly (and most operating systems have this now--Windows XP does it automatically). If you have a PC that is isolated and not connected to anything, _then_ you need either an extremely accurate PC clock, or some external reference that you can use to keep the clock on time, such as a radio-controlled clock, a GPS clock ... or your own wris****ch. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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