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Construct Data offers you the worldwide online directory - Fairguide
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Get a worldwide survey of current fairs with Fair Guide by Construct Data
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Sports: Roundup: Denver drops Wisconsin
Jeff Drummond Drummond's second goal of the game broke a 3-3 tie less than three minutes after it was forged in the second period, as the 11th-ranked Pioneers defeated No. 5 Wisconsin 5-3...
News: Beaten England suffer worst run in 18 years
Ireland beat England 19-13 at Lansdowne Road condemning the world champions to their third successive defeat in the Six Nations Championship. It is England's worst run of results in 18 years, having lost nine of their last 12 games....
Leisure: Rich Tenace's "Stage Stuff"
If You're On Too Much You'll Tick People Off...
Sports: Southern Cal could be just warming up
Matt Leinart, the leader of Southern California's offense, might have finished his college career Tuesday night in the Orange Bowl. Shaun Cody, Mike Patterson and Matt Grootegoed, three of the Trojans' defensive leaders, definitely finished theirs. So, how will USC be next season? In a word, loaded. The last three years, the USC recruiting classes were ranked in the nation's top five. Some lists put the Trojans at No. 1 the last two years....
Computers: Tactical Tip #29: Synchronizing Time
Each computer has its own real-time clock, so the system knows what time it
is. By default, each clock is set separately, and some could be set quite
wrong. This can sometimes cause confusion (e.g., "which is the most recent
version of this file?"). So, it's a good practice to synchronize the clocks
on the computers in your office, either to some internal source (e.g., a
file server), or to a public atomic clock.
For Windows PCs, a free tool for synchronizing a PC's clock with an atomic
clock is NetTime. Mac OS X
and Linux have such facilities built into their operating sytems. On the Mac,
choose the Date and Time applet from the System Preferences. Means of setting
the time on Linux vary by distribution.
If you want to synchronize a Windows PC to have the same time as another
Windows PC on your network, simply run the command net time \\otherpc /set /yes,
where \\otherpc is the name of the PC that has the correct time.
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