![]() ![]() Then I went to bed and slept, leaving the computer on at all times as I always do. I thought it was just a one-off or something to do with incorrect daylight savings (although I've never experienced a clock error like that in my life computer clocks have always 'just worked' for me in all prior cases) so I synced it with the Internet and it was fine. When I logged in after the installation, the clock was off by an hour. #WIN 8.1 DESKTOP CLOCK INSTALL#I haven't had a single issue with that system until this morning when I bought a new SSD and did a clean install of Windows 8.1 RTM on it. ![]() It booted fine I just had to install graphics drivers. About 3 months ago I bought myself a beefy desktop computer and simply removed the SSD from my laptop and put it in my desktop to use permanently. Prior to this incident, I was using Windows mainly on my laptop. I recently got the netbook's left-click button repaired and the repair store replaced the CMOS battery yet again with the exact same results. ![]() If I'm not mistaken, a dead CMOS battery has nothing to do with the running system time after boot, so it simply can't be due to the CMOS battery being flat, not that it should be flat considering the netbook is only 3 years old if I have to put a number on it. I cannot explain this any more clearly and it has literally driven me insane.Ī few weeks ago my netbook's Windows 8 system clock started changing randomly while it was powered on and being used, so after battling with it for days I gave in and changed the CMOS battery even though I was highly sceptical about that being the issue. ![]()
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