My goodness. This still exists in precise and quantal.
This creates a lot of problems when the system has two ubuntu installs side-by-side, and each time I boot into one ubuntu and do a sudo ntpdate, the h/w clock is updated along with the system clock, and the second ubuntu's time is messed up.
As a simple fix, when the installer asks for timezone, the clock can be fixed once a timezone value is available.
My goodness. This still exists in precise and quantal.
This creates a lot of problems when the system has two ubuntu installs side-by-side, and each time I boot into one ubuntu and do a sudo ntpdate, the h/w clock is updated along with the system clock, and the second ubuntu's time is messed up.
As a simple fix, when the installer asks for timezone, the clock can be fixed once a timezone value is available.