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RE: Re[2]: Why atomic time



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Not sure what OS you are using, but virtually all systems will respond to
the sync request from one system to another.

So if you put the atomic clock of your choice on all four systems, then on
the system that has the modem on it, reference the atomic clock server. That
will sync that system, now point the other three systems at the IP address
of the system with the modem on it. The other three will sync with the
original. Windows will respond to the request by another system. That should
keep them all within the atomic clock range. Depending on how accurate you
want to be, you have the atomic clock update at just about any interval you
choose.

I use one called WorldTime. I just tested the above to be sure it works and
it at least works with WorldTime. Goto the website to download for free
http://www.pawprint.net/wt/

Hope that helps!

Dennis

-----Original Message-----
From: BobR [mailto:bobrabcd@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Tuesday, April 09, 2002 12:18 PM
To: omega-list@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Re[2]: Why atomic time


Is there a way to synchronize clocks on 4 computers connected via a simple 4
port NIC hub where one computer is connected to the internet via 56k modem?

thanks,
bobr

----- Original Message -----
From: "Alex Matulich" <alex@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <jejohn@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: <omega-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, April 09, 2002 10:10 AM
Subject: Re: Re[2]: Why atomic time


> >If  someone  could/would send me a zip file file of Atomic Clock (for
> >Win2K), contact me off-list.
>
> This is my favorite one.  Freeware, reliable, highly configurable, and
> easy to use.
>
> http://www.thinkman.com/dimension4/index.html
>
> --
>   ,|___    Alex Matulich -- alex@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>  // +__>   Director of Research and Development
>  //  \
>  // __)    Unicorn Research Corporation -- http://unicorn.us.com
>