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I just did a fresh Arch install and my time is off. My timezone is "America/Shiprock" which I have in rc.conf and its set to local time. On the gnome desktop if I dont use UTC its 6 hours ahead...and if I do use UTC then its exactly 12 hours ahead...ie...its 12:28am here with utc my clock reads 12:28pm and without utc it reads 6:28am. I have had this issue before on Arch and all I can remember is it seems there was some sort of patch or line I needed to add to a file somewhere. I cant remember at all what it was, or how I fixed it. I've googled this problem for about the last 2 hours and Im not finding what I need. Anyone know what it could be?
"The hardest thing is rendering a moment moving to fast to endure"
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Check your BIOS clock and correct your rc.conf accordingly (UTC or localtime). When you've correctly configured your timezone, install ntpd and run ntpdate to synchronize with a time server near you. That's the easiest way to correct the system clock.
A bus station is where a bus stops.
A train station is where a train stops.
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I recommend openntpd over ntpd / ntpdate. Stems from OpenBSD (hence the 'open') and is not only a better alternative but also easier to set up, and said to be safer .
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pacman -S ntp
then: nano /etc/ntp.conf
in the line server ,change to a ntp server closest to you
then ntpdate your.npt.server.adress
run the command two times
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Thanks...worked great
"The hardest thing is rendering a moment moving to fast to endure"
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rdate also is nice
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