Talk:HP Chromebook 14

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Latest comment: 17 February 2015 by Xan in topic Battery clock

Battery clock

Hi,

I suspect that HP Chromebook 14 has not a battery specifically for hardware clock. I leave the laptop battery and after that, in every boot, I have to set the datetime.

Can anyone confirm it spending all the laptop battery and see what happens with the data? If it's confirmed, it implies that you have to install NTP/SNTP client in order to properly set the date in every boot.--Xan (talk) 13:29, 17 January 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]

I don't have the Chromebook 14 but except ntp you should also consider installing fake-hwclock which will save the time on shutdown and import it on startup so you won't experience weird issues due to the fact the time changed to something like 1970.Dhead (talk) 06:34, 18 January 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Very useful. Perhaps we could do more promotion of this package in the wiki.--Xan (talk) 22:11, 23 January 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]
It's generic, don't add it to the HP Chromebook 14 page nor Chromebook page, instead add it to System time page maybe under new section "Tips and tricks" and then link from the HP Chromebook 14 page (create a Time sub section under Post Installation Configuration) to this section on System time page.Dhead (talk) 23:00, 23 January 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Done. See NTP
See my changes, the idea is: 1. Separate sub-section for the package. 2. Proper explaining what the package does as on Arch we actually trying to understand how our system works. 3. Why needed. 4. How to use (the supplied systemd service). 5. :) Dhead (talk) 10:27, 26 January 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]
OK. I solved this issues with 'swclock' from OpenRC.--Xan (talk) 14:50, 17 February 2015 (UTC)Reply[reply]