Invision Community 4: SEO, prepare for v5 and dormant account notifications Matt November 11, 2024Nov 11
March 17, 201312 yr I assume you mean this in your ACP System Settings > Advanced > Date, Time and Number Formats > Native Server Time
September 4, 20159 yr I assume you mean this in your ACP System Settings > Advanced > Date, Time and Number Formats > Native Server Timethis setting is no longer there in IPS 4.13
September 4, 20159 yr Timezones are automatically set for each individual user in IPS4, based on their local system time. No setting needed.
September 4, 20159 yr Timezones are automatically set for each individual user in IPS4, based on their local system time. No setting needed. tell that to the calendar which has a very serious terminal disease
September 4, 20159 yr Yeah, but that's a bit different though. You're specifying a time instead of just being served dates and times for post info, etc.Sometimes you might want to schedule things in different timezones than your own (i.e. international events). There is a timezone option when creating a new event in the calendar.
September 4, 20159 yr Yeah, but that's a bit different though. You're specifying a time instead of just being served dates and times for post info, etc.Sometimes you might want to schedule things in different timezones than your own (i.e. international events). There is a timezone option when creating a new event in the calendar.Yeah it doesnt make any difference for the Calendar at the moment because its not working. Anyway.. thats an ogoing issue elsewhere as it is is very very sick indeed... I just thought I could check site setting for timezone but as you say its on auto pilot ...
November 5, 20168 yr You can sync your system time and date with ntp (Network Time Protocol) over a network or internet. Normally ntp should be installed to your Linux system as default, in case your system does not have ntp, you can easily install ntp package with a simple command. To install ntp on Ubuntu, Linux or debian based distribitions # apt-get update # apt-get install ntp To install ntp on Fedora, Centos or redhat based distribitions # yum install ntp After you set your timezone correcly, you should be able to synce your date and time with ntp command # ntpdate pool.ntp.org Hope this will help.
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