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Which OS are you on? If you're on Windows, this is a known phenomena of that module on that platform. From the HiRes.XS:
In your scenario, if when then first timestamp is taken, the clock has drifted by more than half a second, then Time::HiRes 'corrects' its internal counter. Then, when the second timestamp is taken less that half a second later, the time appears to have run backwards by up to half a second. With the rise and rise of 'Social' network sites: 'Computers are making people easier to use everyday'
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In reply to Re: Time::HiRes gettimeofday producing timestamps out of order
by BrowserUk
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