| Subject: Re: Boinc affects clock |
| From: Steve Charlton |
| Date: 21/09/2004, 19:00 |
In article <NRt2d.2911$gG4.126@newsread1.news.pas.earthlink.net>,
Michael D. Ober <obermd.?@?.alum.mit.edu.nospam.invalid> writes
"Gary Heston" <gheston@hiwaay.net> wrote in message
news:10kklq412rep0c6@corp.supernews.com...
In article <2que07F14aronU1@uni-berlin.de>, BrianW <brian@nospam.net>
wrote:
Martin 53N 1W wrote:
mijikin wrote:
Whenever I run seti (v.4.02) with boinc (v.4.05), my system clock
slows down at a rate of about 5 minutes per hour. My computer is a
Pentium III running Mandrake 9.0. I did not have this problem with
the old seti classic.
This sounds like either a hardware problem or a bug in Mandrake 9.0 (which I
doubt or other Linux versions would exhibit the same problem). The system
clock should be an OS level interrupt. Windows 95, 98, and ME all exhibit
this particular bug when running SETI Classic. Windows NT, 2000, XP, and
2003 don't. Application programs should never be able to turn off hardware
interrupts.
Mike Ober.
Hay! I've got XP and my clock keeps running down too. Did it before I
upgraded (sic) to SP2. My system: 2600+, 512MRam, running BOINC with
SETI and CPDN.
--
Steve Charlton |There may be intelligent life on other planets
steve@gnirekoms.freeserve.co.uk |in the galaxy, but somebody, somewhere, had to
sdrawkcab=backwards |be first.
Carl Sagan (sadly missed)