I've had Windows since 3.0 (!) and have done many, many installs of the many
versions. One thing during setup is setting the time zone/date/time if your
system clock and the dialog box selecting your time zone doesn't get the
hour/day/date correct based on what your system clock already knows, and
what Windows applies according to your zone selection (GMT + or - or
whatever). Usually I see the change - correct and immediate, when I click
the proper time zone.
With the three publicly released versions o' Vista I've tried, I select
"Central Standard Time." It puts my clock behind by two hours (I think
that's what it is, anyway it isn't right). Never happened before Vista. I
think "well, on reboot surely it will be OK." I reboot into XP this time to
run an editor for a universal remote control program and download the latest
changes via USB to it, including date and time. I fail to notice the system
time in XP is now wrong as well and now the remote has the wrong time.
I correct it in XP then it remains OK; but the Vista setup is a surprise, I
clicked a few other time zones and they didn't correct the clock to their
respective time either. Darn, I forgot to go to the clock settings and
select a time zone "outside of setup" to see what that would do, can't try
now, preparing smaller/slower drive to be replaced in anticipation of a new
hard drive so I can try a lot more with Vista than before.
Am I the only one in the *twilight zone* on this? Maybe I missed something
stupid *-) Thanks -
Bill Halvorsen