LOL-- When a browser looks at a security certificate it considers ridiculous dates and times to be suspicious. If your clock is set to 1980, that would be a certificate that was posing as valid 35 years into the future. That's 'suspicious'. Mind you it only matter as much as you have faith in security certificates in the first place, and how well your browser / platform supports them.Fuck me
the date says 1980
HAHAHAlook for a watch battery type thing
Absolutely. I think you guys should get all the babesI guess it's better than being a retard...?
That makes it sound scary though-- Once you know that's the issue, it's actually a dead easy and cheap fix.HAHAHA
CMOS battery...
Thank you Ridgeman!HAHAHA
CMOS battery...
aka Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor
This battery saves the BIOS information (Basic Input Output Settings), which instructs the computer how to boot the various systems as well as the system clock. If the battery fails, the system reverts back to default- usually 1980.
That is the reason why the security certificate system is broken for general purpose browsing.When I get one of those popups, I just ignore it and press on. As far as I know, nothing bad has ever happened. 1980, eh. That is before Y2K.
Wow you are old schoolIf your clock keeps resetting to 1980, look for a watch battery type thing in your device and replace that.
Wow... you are SO wrong it isn't even funny.Wow you are old school
Computers stopped using CMOS battery years ago... decade maybe
Any modern hardware will not have a battery
Google is your friend if you are unaware of how a battery worksWow... you are SO wrong it isn't even funny.
I know what NVRAM is, tool... non-volatile RAM... it has existed as long as (and in conjunction with) motherboard batteries.Google is your friend if you are unaware of how a battery works
Go search how NVRAM works then come back when you have a clue
And then scroll up to see whether that battery has anything to do with CMOSis there a dime-sized battery somewhere on the board? Yeah... thought so.
LOL... you are splitting hairs with CMOS and RTC? Then technically CMOS has NEVER needed a battery because it has essentially ALWAYS been NV.And then scroll up to see whether that battery has anything to do with CMOS
There is a RTC battery but this is not even close to the same thing (although I know to you it probably looks the same)
They all still have a battery, though on modern motherboards it is used only for the internal clock.Google is your friend if you are unaware of how a battery works
Go search how NVRAM works then come back when you have a clue