Originally posted by Steve Guttag
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Clock in GDC-TMS didn't switch to daylight saving time
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"If it compiles, ship it."
One of the things that I've never liked about Windows (in my very limited exposure to it, that is) is that everything is hidden behind three layers of GUI and hidden settings. It's like trying to fix something that's under a heavy curtain and you're feeling around trying to find the screws on the access hatch without being able to see what's going on.
I'll take a config file that I can read and edit any day.
Of course modern Linux has moved into systemd and dconf and logs that can't be read as text files and so forth now too, so it seems the Windows experience is slowly moving over into the lets make this as obscure as possible camp too. Sigh....
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Originally posted by Frank Cox View PostOne of the things that I've never liked about Windows (in my very limited exposure to it, that is) is that everything is hidden behind three layers of GUI and hidden settings. It's like trying to fix something that's under a heavy curtain and you're feeling around trying to find the screws on the access hatch without being able to see what's going on.
I am so fed up with this shit. I was thinking that I need to start a blog someplace and just rant. I could go on and on. I struggle to not do that here because i can get off topic.
Look if the JNIOR pisses you off in any way, let me know. Seriously.
Damn, Covid, tariffs, cost of living, wars... we are actually going to increase some prices on the 1st of the coming month. Honestly that is not me. The idea is to reduce costs but, no, we are screwed in every direction we look. But... we've just been forced into it.
Well, at least the DST thing isn't a problem anymore... not for a bit.
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Originally posted by Frank Cox View Post"If it compiles, ship it."
One of the things that I've never liked about Windows (in my very limited exposure to it, that is) is that everything is hidden behind three layers of GUI and hidden settings. It's like trying to fix something that's under a heavy curtain and you're feeling around trying to find the screws on the access hatch without being able to see what's going on.
I'll take a config file that I can read and edit any day.
Of course modern Linux has moved into systemd and dconf and logs that can't be read as text files and so forth now too, so it seems the Windows experience is slowly moving over into the lets make this as obscure as possible camp too. Sigh....
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Originally posted by Mark Gulbrandsen View PostLOL! I disagree! You have to think of Windblows as having different departments. Like Control Panel, Firewall, etc. Windblows is actually pretty easy once you learn what is in each department.
So I've known Windows since 3.1 and quite closely. Uh... there is always some deficiency and no straight forward solution. Norton made his whole business before security on work-around solutions to Windows limitations. I've personally written some of those utilities. I appreciate the nomenclature "Winblows" but casting it as "pretty easy"? Uh, no. Over simplified to the point where solutions are non-universal and lead as a rule to guess-work? Yes.
But to base the reputation of your product on the ongoing performance of underlying software written and maintained by Microsoft... a questionable business decision to say the least. But if greedy fast to market is your goal, Windows I guess is a good deal.
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Originally posted by Bruce Cloutier View Post
Um... Mark? What?
So I've known Windows since 3.1 and quite closely. Uh... there is always some deficiency and no straight forward solution. Norton made his whole business before security on work-around solutions to Windows limitations. I've personally written some of those utilities. I appreciate the nomenclature "Winblows" but casting it as "pretty easy"? Uh, no. Over simplified to the point where solutions are non-universal and lead as a rule to guess-work? Yes.
But to base the reputation of your product on the ongoing performance of underlying software written and maintained by Microsoft... a questionable business decision to say the least. But if greedy fast to market is your goal, Windows I guess is a good deal.
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Originally posted by Mark Gulbrandsen View Post
Then how come none of the 30+ TMS's I checked over the weekend had the problem?
You'd need to check with GDC tech support (as I did) about the issue to get an answer as to why you are so special.
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Originally posted by Bruce Cloutier View Post
Um... Mark? What?
So I've known Windows since 3.1 and quite closely. Uh... there is always some deficiency and no straight forward solution. Norton made his whole business before security on work-around solutions to Windows limitations. I've personally written some of those utilities. I appreciate the nomenclature "Winblows" but casting it as "pretty easy"? Uh, no. Over simplified to the point where solutions are non-universal and lead as a rule to guess-work? Yes.
But to base the reputation of your product on the ongoing performance of underlying software written and maintained by Microsoft... a questionable business decision to say the least. But if greedy fast to market is your goal, Windows I guess is a good deal.
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The GDC TMS installs its own time/NTP service and does not use the built-in Windows one (w32tm). You can see it in the processes list in the task manager. My guess is that there was a glitch in this service on the original poster's installation uniquely.
I had one site where none of the screen servers would sync their time with the TMS for some reason. Something was wrong with the GDC service. Rather than mess around with the very fragile GDC TMS ecosystem (postgres, an ancient and long obsolete version of FileZilla server, etc.), I then configured the built-in Windows service to act as a NTP server and opened UDP 123 to incoming connections in the Windows firewall, after which they all synced up again.
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Folks, as Steve G. predicted, the boat did right itself, though I wasn't around to watch it happen. I swear, I never panicked when I noted this problem last week, but I did grumble.
I am not a codehead. Most of what is written above is undecipherable to me, a film guy who had to adjust as best I could to the new video projection world. I'm actually happy my question was answered so quickly and for once correctly. I'm used to my enquiries being shrugged off with some variation of "try clearing your cookies". (That has never solved anything! Ever get the feeling you're being razzed?)
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Originally posted by Harold Hallikainen View PostTo add further confusion, the senate just passed the "Daylight Protection Act of 2021" which redefines each time zone making standard time one hour advanced from where it is now as computed from UTC.
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Originally posted by Peter Mork View PostFolks, as Steve G. predicted, the boat did right itself, though I wasn't around to watch it happen. I swear, I never panicked when I noted this problem last week, but I did grumble.
I am not a codehead. Most of what is written above is undecipherable to me, a film guy who had to adjust as best I could to the new video projection world. I'm actually happy my question was answered so quickly and for once correctly. I'm used to my enquiries being shrugged off with some variation of "try clearing your cookies". (That has never solved anything! Ever get the feeling you're being razzed?)
Or start one call3ed "Why did the fuse in my amplifier blow?" Hold on with one like that. IN less than 90 minutes the entire circuit of that amp will have been looked at, redesigned, and repaired for you in it's resultant 7 pages of posts. .
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Originally posted by Mark GulbrandsenIt shouldn't matter Harold. The TMS and servers time should simply reflect the NTP time
If the government really does go ahead and f*** with daylight saving time again (and IMHO, that would be a really bad idea, unless we go to year-round standard time, which I would support), a lot of DCI equipment will need software updates to take account of that, because UTC never changes. For example, here (Los Angeles), we are eight hours behind UTC when DST is not in effect, and seven when it is. I predict that there would be significant problems in our business if the bi-annual clock changes stop. I regularly encounter projectors and servers that have not had any software or firmware updates since they were installed 5-10 years ago. No matter how much of an information campaign manufacturers and industry bodies (e.g. ISDCF or ICTA) put up, a lot will not be updated, and theater managers will have shows start an hour early or an hour late, because the server has applied an hour's change from UTC when it shouldn't have done.
We did a similar education and information campaign about media block batteries going flat during the covid shutdown, but yet I still encountered many that had gone bad when it came to reopening, including in the theaters of people I'd reached out to. The same problem in another form will happen if DST is made permanent or abolished completely.
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