hwclock --hctosys will do it - run a batch file?

Or have ntpdate run automatically as the system boots?

If you mean that Debian shows a different time to Windows consistently -
check that one OS isn't resetting the other's clock. You can persuade
Windows _not_ to reset the clock on daylight saving time changes, for
example - or you can make sure that they both run in the same timezone and
change at the same time.The Debian-specific command:

ntpdate-debian

will run to the ntp pool set by Debian so that you don't have to specify an
NTP server

On Thu, Jul 30, 2020 at 11:19 AM Albretch Mueller <lbrt...@gmail.com> wrote:

>  I used the same laptop with another hard drive with a Windows
> installation which shows the time correctly.
>
>  How do you make Linux get the time from the BIOS at start time and
> take it from there?
>
>  lbrtchx
>
>

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