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#1 |
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Nov 2003
European Union
23·13 Posts |
What is your current uptime statistics, in all of your computers?
Mine: PC1: 2 days, 19 hours (GNU/Linux) PC2: 9 days, 18 hours (GNU/Linux) To see the uptime in GNU/Linux type top in a tty. To see the uptime in the wInsecure OS, type systeminfo in a command prompt or search the net for uptime.exe |
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#2 |
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Jul 2004
Sweden
5 Posts |
Due to a power-failure I now only have 1 day and 15 hours...
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#3 |
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Sep 2002
Austin, TX
10618 Posts |
2 days and 12 hours Main windows machine
12 days and 1 hour another windows machine |
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#4 |
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Aug 2003
24×3 Posts |
12:12:22 up 89 days, 58 min, 6 users, load average: 1.00, 1.04, 1.02
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#5 |
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Oct 2003
Canada
47 Posts |
7 hours, at the moment. :( (Or at least I've been on IRC for seven hours, which I usually sign onto as soon as I turn my computer on).
The reason for that is that my parents don't like me leaving my compy on overnight. School'll start up again in September, though... so I can leave it on for weeks at a time... :) |
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#6 |
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Sep 2002
2×331 Posts |
22 days 19 hours but could be that plus 49.7 days. Win 98 SE
On Win 95 there is a bug so it only runs 49.7 days ( though there is a patch ) On Win 98 SE it is fixed but after 49.7 days it cycles back to zero. The time in 1/1000 of a second is mod 2^32. A 32 bit dword can only hold 49.7 days of 1/1000 of a second. 2^32 - 1 = 49.7 * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000 (the 49.7 is approximate). Is there some way to know how long a machine running Win 9X has been running ( if longer than 49.7 days ) ? Is there some file or registry entry that is written/updated only when Windows starts that can be used as a time marker ? |
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#7 |
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Nov 2003
European Union
6816 Posts |
maybe the pagefile creation date?
If you boot with the logging option, check the boot.log It is possible also to do this: Create a file in Notepad with the logging command in it. To find the logging command check the Notepad Help. I think it is ".LOG". This command must be the only thing in the first line, and you shouldn't write anything more. Place Notepad in the Startup group to make it run at any boot. Now reconfigure the shortcut to make it load the text file you just created. Notepad will run every time you start the computer keeping the date and time in this text file. |
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#8 |
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"Patrik Johansson"
Aug 2002
Uppsala, Sweden
1A916 Posts |
For my computers at home:
alpha: 24 days 22 hours zeta: 19 days 21 hours eta: 1 day 7 hours theta: 16 days 7 hours iota: 24 days 22 hours kappa: 16 days 7 hours lambda: 4 hours ws001: 16 days 7 hours Last fiddled with by patrik on 2004-07-24 at 13:48 Reason: to get the Greek letters in alphabetic order |
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