I tried every script mod, deletion, etc I found (including the Sourceforge How-To so many folks like to refer us to) to no avail. I do not know if this will solve everyone's issue, but this is what finally worked for me - you will note that your settings have to be like mine for this fix to probably work (see under the steps for explanation): 1) Ensure the time is set properly in CMOS and software via Yast. 2) In the KDE menu program menu, select "Save Session" Ever since I re-saved my session, the clock has stopped resetting itself. Splanation (long): I have no idea what happened behind the scenes, but the first thing I do upon installation/upgrade is turn off the silly new KDE menu style, and revert to the basic KDE menu. I thereafter set my system thru KDE's Control Panel to "load saved session", because I tend to tweak and experiment a lot and have messed up my KDE configs pretty badly before :D I explicitly remember when I switched to 11.0, NTP had been enabled, and my stupid router was "off" (set to UTC vs. local). When I finally did get around to turning off NTPD, it had already sunc (that's Texan for 'synch'ed') the time AND I had already saved my session and changed KDE to load that saved session every boot. It doesn't seem to me that time zone should be saved in KDE session settings, but I re-saved the session this past Thursday, et violins, it hasn't mysteriously reset my time since then - and I've rebooted to test this theory about 15 times. Good thing, too, because between that odd behavior and the totally unhelpful "what are you guys idiots who cannot read" posts to the listserv, I was going insane. I kinda made it worse, because I typically don't reboot my system for weeks, and would forget about the problem with the time, hehe. BTW - guys, we ARE reading and trying your suggestions - sometimes the cause ain't what you're asserting. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org