I don't know if daily wake events can be programmed in the hardware real
time clock.

Yes, a small "+wakup again" checkbox or similar collapsible UI to enter
a date would be sufficient I guess. But if it the UI could remember the
last setting used this might already also allow daily (next day)
wakeups.

For facility wide power saving schedules I think debian has a "shutdown-
at-night" package.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/987420

Title:
  allow to set restart/resume time on shutdown/suspend

Status in “gnome-session” package in Ubuntu:
  New

Bug description:
  Linux provides a simple way to schedule an restart event, for example:

  rtcwake -m on -s <seconds-to-sleep>

  This command avoids that rtcwake does any switching into another power
  state (mode -m stays on).
  The power state is thus handled by the regular installed powermanagment
  tools, which is more stable especially on resume.

  Just schedule the wake event, then do the regular shutdown/suspend.
  Later, the real time clock will trigger the scheduled power event
  and the machine comes back up.

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