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Old November 10th 09, 05:51 AM posted to microsoft.public.win98.setup
glee
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Posts: 2,458
Default CMOS battery in laptop is dead, can I use MS-DOS date & time commands?

"SlickRCBD" wrote in message
...
The CMOST battery in an old laptop of mine is dead. I need to be able
to open & edit Word documents away from computers once a week for the
rest of the month. It's not worth it to shell out several hundred
dollars for a new laptop when this is the first time I've needed this
one in years. Is there any reason why I can't stick a batch file in
my startup items folder in Win98 First Edition with two lines
date
time
to prompt me to set the date and time like some of my friends used to
have to do with their MS-DOS systems when I was a child? The default
settings for the laptop seem to work just fine, the only problem I
see with the dead CMOS battery is the messed up clock. Is there
anything else I might not be noticing? When I've checked Setup (hit f2
to enter setup) everything except the clock looks fine.

Oh, should I use startup items or edit the traditional autoexec.bat? I
can't recall if that gets used by default, or only when booting to MS-
DOS mode.


Using the DOS date and time commands isn't going to do you any good, if
the BIOS Setup is showing the wrong time and date. Those DOS commands
just get date and time from the BIOS....and the BIOS is wrong due to a
dying CMOS battery. Where did you think DOS gets the time and date
from?
--
Glen Ventura, MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009
A+
http://dts-l.net/