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7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
reed
e2336bb021 "It's" stands for "it is" (or "it has"). The apostrophe is not used
for a possessive (like her, his, whose, their, and its).

Note that I didn't check for proper use of "its" (when it should
be "it is" or "it has" instead).

I also saw over 15 other grammar or punctuation problems, but not
fixed in this commit.
2003-08-30 02:14:19 +00:00
martti
a6f1375adb COMMENT should start with a capital letter. 2003-07-21 17:27:24 +00:00
grant
ca3be631f2 s/netbsd.org/NetBSD.org/ 2003-07-17 22:50:55 +00:00
jschauma
e366d0c694 Use tech-pkg@ in favor of packages@ as MAINTAINER for orphaned packages.
Should anybody feel like they could be the maintainer for any of thewe packages,
please adjust.
2003-06-02 01:15:31 +00:00
simonb
a789420971 Use "Australia/Sydney" instead of "Australia/Queensland" for the
"sydney" timezone, otherwise Sydney suddenly misses out on daylight
savings time.
2003-01-30 22:37:25 +00:00
dmcmahill
15ba098414 make this go on alpha 2002-06-15 20:40:25 +00:00
agc
9b84ee8c8f Initial import of xchrono, a multi-timezoned X11 clock, into the NetBSD
packages collection.

Xchrono is a multi-timezone, multi-face clock program for X Windows.
Several cities have been compiled into xchrono, and can be invoked with
command-line arguments, xchrono -help gives:

Usage: xchrono [-analog] [-bw <pixels>] [-digital]
	       [-fg <color>] [-bg <color>] [-hd <color>]
	       [-hl <color>] [-bd <color>]
	       [-fn <font_name>] [-help] [-padding <pixels>]
	       [-rv] [-update <seconds>] [-display displayname]
	       [-geometry geom]
	       [-width clockWidth] [-height clockHeight] [-local localName]
	       [-boston] [-newyork] [-chicago] [-denver] [-la]
	       [-hawaii] [-tokyo] [-sydney] [-london]
	       [-paris] [-frankfurt] [-rio]

OK, OK, Hawaii isn't a city, but you get the point. The timezones used
are taken from tztab in the SYSV case, and from /usr/lib/zoneinfo
otherwise, and as such may or may not be correct (the TZ variable
definitions or the city->timezone mappings).

The -local <localName> option causes a clock labeled with <localName>
using the value of TZ at startup as it's timezone.  In addition, a GMT
clock always appears.

[Requested by groo, who has enough trouble with one timezone, so why he
wants more is beyond me.]
2002-05-14 18:47:52 +00:00