


Time and date settings are stored in BIOS, so if your battery is corrupted BIOS won’t be able to properly store the time and date settings thus causing your clock to show incorrect time in Windows 10. If the clock on Windows 10 is wrong, you might want to check your computer battery.

(most sites / forums use a similar version for pictures) How did you do that? I can't simply paste an image into my post here. You included an image of your taskbar in an earlier post. I've since updated Windows 10, and that didn't fix the problem. This basic problem was not due to a Windows 10 update, since I had auto updates disabled at the time. That is, the problem doesn't seem to be due to certain dates requiring too much space on the taskbar and hence the OS suppressing them entirely. When it worked, there was no logic to it for a while, specifying a longer day of the week format (dddd instead of ddd) made the date appear even though that took more space on the taskbar. Sometimes that worked, by immediately restoring the date. I have tried adjusting the settings via this thread: right click | adjust date and time | date, time, and regional settings | additional date, time, and regional settings | change date, time, or number formats | additional settings | date (tab) | and then trying different short date formats. About two weeks ago, an intermittent problem began to occur: the date part of the Date and time display on my taskbar disappears on some days.
