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On Mon, 8 Nov 1999, Brian May wrote:

> However, I myself would do the following:
> 
> 1. With computer booted, edit /etc/default/rcS and sent GMT as required:
> 
> >Here is the relevant setting from my /etc/default/rcS:
> >
> ># Set GMT="-u" if your system clock is set to GMT, and GMT="" if not.
> >GMT=""
> 
> (I think this has changed for potato).

For potato, this is the relavent section of that file:
  # Set UTC to yes or no
  UTC=yes
Yes if your clock is in GMT, obviously. UTC is French for "Coordinated 
Universal Time" IIRC.

> 2. Now updated you CMOS clock by typing in:
> 
> /etc/init.d/hwclock.sh stop

You may want to rm the .etc.adjtime file right away then. Otherwise, it
_might_ think your clock is suddenly several hours off and screw things
up. The file will be recreated next time you shut down normally.

YMMV. Maybe it was just totally confused on my machine because i was
testing if St. Tib's Day was outputting properly in an app i was
writing...

> (really dumb idiotic off-topic question - is it possible to setup
> Windoze so that it will work when the CMOS clock is GMT? My guess: Of
> course not!)

i haven't used windoze enough to check it, but i just set the date/time
thing in there to GMT and no daylight savings time update. Works perfectly
fine. The only problem then is that the windoze clock displays in GMT ;)

As an indication of how often i use windoze, about every third time it
used to reset my clock because of DST.


- -- 
  finger for PGP public key.


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