On Mon, Jul 4, 2011 at 4:56 PM, Petrus de Calguarium <pgueckel@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Ed Greshko wrote: > >> When I rebooted I made sure not to request NTP as an option. Also, I >> picked "Advanced" when creating the first user an picked UID/GID=1000. > > Great stuff! At what point does it ask about NTP - I thought that came later in the install process? If you select a timezone but leave the default utc flag unset then this system does hit the network request issue - I checked three times to make sure I was not doing something dumb. I did not at that stage find any options to select ntp to sync time before I had the network request - unless I am really blind! > >> So, that answers another issue raised on this list earlier. :-) > > But there's still the issue of Fedora using the preferred UTC time for the > system clock and Debian-like systems using local. Debian changes the clock on > you. That is a major peeve of mine. When you reboot Fedora, the clock is now > local, so Fedora stops booting and tells you your disks were last mounted in > the future and you have to fix the problem. Sheesh! Maybe I should try again with the utc box ticked! (Though I still can't see that it should ask about networking anyway) -- mike c -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines