I'm running Debian Jessie with KDE on a laptop, and the install has
developed a very annoying problem.. I have the bios/hw clock set on
localtime (American/Pacific time). Every time I start the machine up, the
system clock changes to UTC. I have to then go to the taskbar "set
date/time" and run the time back to local time. Also, the tooltip that
comes up when you mouse over the taskbar clock shows the same time for "Los
Angeles" and UTC. I've run hwclock --localtime to notify the os that the hw
clock is on localtime.. I've also tried putting the hw clock on UTC and
running hwclock --utc.. Then after each reboot, I see in the clock tooltip
being UTC for both localtime and UTC.. When I first built this system,
about 3 months ago, I didnt have this problem, it has appeared fairly
recently, and I've just been living with it, but its getting awfully
annoying... Further google-foo showed that /etc/adjclock had to have
LOCAL in the third line, which it does.. Doesn't seem to make any
difference.. The KDE "Adjust Date/Time" shows TZ as "LosAngeles/Pacific
Time", which is what it should be. I've tried installed ntpdate and tried
setting "Set Date/Time automatically" but it quickly sets the system time
to UTC..  Am at my wits end.. Been using Linux for a LONG time and never
had a weird issue like this...

Dave Frandin
lvdave*AT*GEEmale(DOT)com

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