Underneath, Myriad just reads the time from the Windows Clock, and everything internally runs to 1 hundredth of a second accuracy but the routines that update the actual clock display on the window only fire a certain number of times a second. Just for the sake of conversation, say it fires every 0.3 of a second. It will therefore fire at 0, 0.3, 0.6, 0.9 and again at 1.2 - it doesn't actually fire at 1.0 therefore you don't see the actual moment it rolls over - this is shown at the next update at 1.2 The actual accuracy is much higher, but you see the point. This is why it sometimes seems to be out, even though it is actually spot on. Therefore checking the windows clock (which updates on different principles) shows a more representative view of the current time. (Exhale!)
------------ Peter Jarrett, Technical Director Broadcast Radio Ltd.Bill Bailey: No win, no fee, no basis in reality. Just a room above a minicab office in Acton and a steady stream of greedy simpletons whose delusion is only matched by their clumsiness
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