Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!bonnie.concordia.ca!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rphroy!hobbes.cs.gmr.com!tkacik From: tkacik@hobbes.cs.gmr.com (Tom Tkacik CS/50) Newsgroups: comp.windows.x Subject: Re: Night/Day program Keywords: clock,X,Timezone Message-ID: <56962@rphroy.UUCP> Date: 25 Jun 91 12:12:41 GMT References: <1991Jun25.005238.10956@gucis.sct.gu.edu.au> Sender: news@rphroy.UUCP Reply-To: tkacik@hobbes.cs.gmr.com (Tom Tkacik CS/50) Distribution: comp Organization: G.M. Research Labs, Warren, MI Lines: 23 Nntp-Posting-Host: hobbes.cs.gmr.com In article , richard@mungarra.asis.unimelb.edu.au (Richard Begg) writes: |> anthony@gucis.sct.gu.edu.au (Anthony Thyssen) writes: |> |> >Has anyone seen a program which produces a small window with the |> >map of the world in it, that shows the areas of the world that is in |> >night (inverted) and those that is in day. |> It is called sunclock, and I assume it is on export.lcs.mit.edu in /contrib |> (I have seen it on several other X11 archives.) I have a little problem with sunclock. On my Sun IPC running OpenWindows, sunclock shows day as black and night as white. The time at the bottom is fine, so it's not a case of an errant colormap. Any clues as to the cause of this? (The clock is right, so that's not the problem.) -- Tom Tkacik GM Research Labs tkacik@hobbes.cs.gmr.com tkacik@kyzyl.mi.org