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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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In article ,
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article ], isw wrote: The bottom line is that unless you synchronize it with a "reference" timekeeper, it *will not* run at the correct rate. The only question is how fast it will drift. NTP clients (*good* ones) can deal with the problem amazingly well, but only if the host's network connection is pretty much continuous and the host essentially does not sleep. My machine is switched off when not in use. The prog which synchronises the machine time to the network runs at boot. It also tells you what it's done. And perhaps a couple of times a week it adjusts the time by a few seconds. So the internal clock is near as accurate as an ordinary quartz battery one. I'm not quite sure just when it would matter if the internal clock was a few seconds out anyway. If you're just an ordinary user, it probably doesn't. If you are the telephone company, or a television broadcaster, though, things really do work a lot better when the digital signals carried by your network all are at precisely the same bitrate, no matter where they come from. A GPS receiver feeding a UNIX box running NTP can give you a local timebase accurate to about one part in ten (American) billions. Isaac |
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