Hi all! Can anybody give me an idea where can I find timesync.pif? As I do no have full access to internet I need an ftp site. I have tried to look at samba.enu.edu.au ftp site but unsuccessfully. Or can anybody even send the file to me? It should be small.... Thanks in advance! Best regards Pavel p5540@lit.ul.ds.mfcr.cz
> Can anybody give me an idea where can I find timesync.pif? > As I do no have full access to internet I need an ftp site. > I have tried to look at samba.enu.edu.au ftp site but unsuccessfully. > Or can anybody even send the file to me? It should be small.... > Thanks in advance! > Best regardsAll it is is a pif file of the 'net time \\server /set /yes' command. You can create a shortcut that runs it. Nothing else is neccessary. j- ________________________________________________________________________ Gerald ( Jerry ) Carter Engineering Network Services Auburn University jerry@eng.auburn.edu http://www.eng.auburn.edu/users/cartegw "...a hundred billion castaways looking for a home." - Sting "Message in a Bottle" ( 1979 )
Hello Pavel, in case you haven't got it yet, here is the contents of "timesync.pif", as I do use it under WfWG (MS Windows 3.11): Just start pifedit.exe from your windows directory. Let's assume it is C:\WINDOWS. Then fill in the form that has shown up on the screen: file name: C:\WINDOWS\NET.EXE program parameters: TIME \\timeserver /SET /YES (execution: background; close window after execution. Save this as "timesync.pif"!) "timeserver" is the NetBIOS name of an NT server that supports the time service. If you don't know a name but know the name of a workgroup that might contain such a server, open a DOS window and type: C:\WINDOWS\NET TIME /WORKGROUP:the_name_of_that_workgroup If there is a server you can use, its name will then show up. Regards, Martin