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We're a community of IT professionals committed to sharing knowledge. Our experts volunteer their time to help other people in the technology industry learn and succeed. Viewed 65k times. Improve this question. Add a comment. Active Oldest Votes. Improve this answer. Good to hear, especially since it's often possible to password protect being able to change the BIOS settings, too, but apparently your school didn't do that.
From the "Start" button, choose "Run" and enter "cmd. On the CMD type: date It will show you the current date of the computer and should allow you to type a new date on this format: mm-dd-yy , just type it and press Enter To change the time its the same but instead of the command date type: time And type hh:mm:ss That should do it..
Eskiso Eskiso 15 1 1 bronze badge. Examples of solution Use Scheduled task Use setting of time from remote computer server Regards Milos. Thank you for your reply, I'm not sure what you mean.
Thank you, kittimiyo. Tuesday, July 10, AM. This was useful, but it did not solve my problem. Thank you fro your effort, I think I'm just going to drop it. I've been trying for a week to solve this. Tuesday, July 10, PM. And type, hh:mm:ss. Let us know how it goes. How satisfied are you with this reply? Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site. Kenneth McMichael. In reply to Julie Ram's post on September 23, When trying to set the time via command line - I get ' a required privilege is not held by the client'.
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