<p>Hi Scott,</p>
<p>Thanks for the reply. I dont want this to get bitchy but Myth is used worldwide, .com addresses are world wide and Raptor stated that DST <i>for him </i>did occur. <br></p><p>enough said?<br></p>Surely this is helpful as a warning to those people who live in countries that haven't quite caught up with us yet (yes that is a time pun, no offence meant), as it gives you a reminder that problems might lie on the tracks ahead...<br>
<br>In any case; the trac for changing to UTC would fix this, but of course this is low priority as it would have ramifications throughout the code yet only affects us (all?) twice a year ... it caused my system mythbackend process to crash on Saturday.<br>
<br>ROn Oct 26, 2009 5:14 PM, "Scott Alfter" <<a href="mailto:scott-sender-2f809c@alfter.us" target="_blank">scott-sender-2f809c@alfter.us</a>> wrote:<br><blockquote type="cite"><br><p><font color="#500050">On Sun, October 25, 2009 3:18 am, raptor jr wrote:
>
> So today daylight time saving occured.
</font></p>
Not in the US, it didn't...if you're somewhere else, you probably<br>
should've specified it, as your email address doesn't say.<br>
<br>
That said, if the definition of DST has changed in your country recently<br>
(as it did here a few years ago), you should make sure your timezone files<br>
are up-to-date. With Gentoo, something like "emerge -1 timezone-data"<br>
should work. Otherwise, your clock will adjust at the wrong time.<br>
<br>
Scott Alfter<br><font color="#888888">
<a href="mailto:scott@alfter.us" target="_blank">scott@alfter.us</a></font><p><font color="#500050">
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