Talk:Release notes/13.2.0

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Clock

After installing 13.2.0 on a XO-1.5, the clock was set with:

sudo date --set="2013-10-17 7:10"

All appears well except that Gnome displays UTC rather than local time. The offset from Greenwich shown by the location under the calendar is right. How can local time be specified? --Peasthope 15:45, 17 October 2013 (UTC)

To set the time zone, start Terminal, paste this:
sudo yum install -y system-config-date
then in the Gnome menu select Applications -> Other -> System-Config-Date (Set Date & Time), select the Time Zone tab, select the city, leave System clock uses UTC set, click OK, see the Gnome clock change, click Cancel.
Alternatively, identify and copy an appropriate timezone file from /usr/share/zoneinfo to /etc/localtime:
sudo cp /usr/share/zoneinfo/Iceland /etc/localtime
Using date is slow and cumbersome. To set the time more easily, start Terminal, paste this:
sudo yum install -y ntpdate && sudo ntpdate pool.ntp.org
Your other question was moved to Talk:Releases. --Quozl 02:54, 18 October 2013 (UTC)
Good, thanks. Subsequently I read <trac>12085</trac>. Chrony will automate correction for clock drift at the cost of another background process. Will stay with your instructions until there is a consensus recommending the extra automation, ... Peasthope 15:08, 18 October 2013 (UTC)
The discussion in <trac>12085</trac> is for a future release, as the decision has scale implications for any deployment. My advice above was intended for a skilled user or developer, and is not suitable for deployment in this exact form. We have no plans right now for a future release. --Quozl 21:42, 18 October 2013 (UTC)

Release 13.2.0

No significant complaints. Nice work. Thanks, ... Peasthope 15:17, 18 October 2013 (UTC)