Maintains date and time synchronization on all clients and servers in the network. If this service is stopped,
date and time synchronization will be unavailable. If this service is disabled, any services that explicitly
depend on it will fail to start. Automatically sets your clock by contacting a server (Microsoft's server by default)
on the internet. Great idea if your network connects to the internet 24/7. The Event Log fills up with
"cannot find server" messages on a non-dedicated setup, though. After successful synchronizing, this service will
not attempt to do it again for 7 days, meanwhile, taking up resources. You may also need Task Scheduler running.
You may choose to set your clock manually on a dial up connection, but with a 24/7 broadband setup, this could keep
you on time for work. Note: as mentioned, "time.windows.com" is the default server for synchronization.
For those privacy conscious people that prefer to connect to a government site rather then MS, use "time.nist.gov."
Используются технологии uCoz