Forum Home
Press F1
 
Thread ID: 103557 2009-09-28 00:24:00 Time and Date DeSade (984) Press F1
Post ID Timestamp Content User
814586 2009-09-28 00:24:00 Where are the regional time and date settings on a MAC please DeSade (984)
814587 2009-09-28 01:18:00 No idea, but at a guess...

System Preferences, Date & Time. :p

Is this OS X?
wratterus (105)
814588 2009-09-28 01:23:00 Yes Snow Leopard I believe. DeSade (984)
814589 2009-09-28 04:25:00 Should be in System Preferences, but I don't have Snow Leopard, so not sure. Check it out on the Apple site.

LL
lakewoodlady (103)
814590 2009-09-28 04:28:00 For some reason my Vista PC didnt change the clock settings on Sunday morning :confused: everything else did.. even my linux mint 7 pc. ronyville (10611)
814591 2009-09-28 04:41:00 if you click the clock at the top right of the sceen and then go to time date, that will bring up system prederences or go to top left-apple-system preferences.
The above is for leopard, not snow leopard but I presume it hasn't changed
plod (107)
814592 2009-09-28 05:06:00 Snow Leopard settings are the same as Leopard so Date and Time is in the same place> system prefs. rob_on_guitar (4196)
814593 2009-09-28 05:40:00 For some reason my Vista PC didnt change the clock settings on Sunday morning :confused: everything else did.. even my linux mint 7 pc.

Does Vista need that "Automatically update for Daylight saving changes" option ticked?
beeswax34 (63)
814594 2009-09-28 07:40:00 Not from me: The main changes to Snow Leopard are under the hood as opposed to the GUI side of things and involve
Grand Central which has been open sourced under the Linux Apache GPL- It allows your computer to be "over clocked" without the need for over clocking
en.wikipedia.org

And Open GL ES 2.0 (also open sourced) - Open GL ES 2.0 is the code that makes games run better and faster on the iPhone and iPod touch
www.khronos.org

All of the changes will be useful to software devs.
rob_on_guitar (4196)
1