![]() If anyone wants to educate me as to why I came to the wrong conclusions here, I'm all ears and I like to learn. It took me a while to figure out that you use the "Always underneath" option in the Opera widget to keep it from having a window button in the panel - but now, I seem to have a happy ending to this little Linux story (except that I hate Opera as a browser). Außerdem ist eine Alarmfunktion für Ihre Termine integriert. I saved the output as text and compared them in Meld - here's a link to my screenshot of THAT: As you can see, cairo-clock uses three times the CPU resources - though somewhat less memory. Das kostenlose Tool ClocX bringt eine Analoguhr in 100 verschiedenen Designs auf den Desktop. Put a check-mark in the Show this clock box. When the Date and Time window opens, select the Additional Clocks tab. In the Date & time window, scroll down and select Add clocks for different time zones. I ran TOP under identical conditions, once using cairo-clock and once using the Opera widget. It’s easy to do Right-click on the clock in the system tray. ![]() The thing that surprised me is that the Opera widget consumes considerably less CPU power than cairo-clock - and looks better too, in my opinion (you click on the center dot to change skins). Two things did work however and one surprised me: Cairo-clock (which is in the community repositories) and the Opera Widget "Analog Clock" (advertised as "Simple Analog Clock" or something close to that - it's their most popular analog clock widget). I also tried "adesklets" with "adeskclock" (also both in the AUR), They compiled, but did not run - and I didn't think I'd be posting here or I would have noted why they weren't running. Xonclock is no longer being developed, so it likely won't ever work again. Puppy Linux uses "xonclock" which is nice AND in the AUR - but it no longer compiles due to a "freetype" version dependency issue. I use Arch (i686) with XFCE on a moderately old Acer Aspire 2920Z laptop - and I was trying to get an analog clock on the screen without "cairo dock" (which I hate - all I want from it is a clock, anyway). Moreover, you can select the color and the font of the clock widget and set them accordingly. It has a clock widget that is available in black and white. I am a Linux user of "intermediate" experience. If you are looking for a clean clock skin for the Rainmeter, then this is the skin that you should go for. Just my experience these past few days - an FYI for anyone else who has been fussing about with this. ![]() Update from Geneva: I installed the TP Clock app and it’s just what I was looking for.I'm not posting a bug or problem. Feel free to check them out by launching the Microsoft Store app and searching for the term analog clock app. That’s all there is to installing and configuring the TP Clock app on your Windows 10 PC.Īs I mentioned earlier, there are several other analog clock apps in the Microsoft Store as well. I have my analog clock tucked away in the top right corner of the screen as depicted in this partial screenshot:Īs you can see, it’s sitting in the corner of the screen in a place that’s out of the way, yet always visible when I’m using my PC. Click on the word Move and drag the clock to the location on the Desktop where you want it to remain.Ĩ – (Optional) Click the little gear icon to check out several optional settings that you can change if you want to.ĩ – Click Ok to redisplay the clock face. App has many background images included for. ![]() You should now see the clock displayed on the Desktop.ħ – Click on the clock and you’ll see some options appear. Useful analog clock for your Windows 10 devices Works great as a nightstand clock and as a desktop widget. If you’d like to give it a try just follow the steps listed below:Ģ – Select Microsoft Store from the apps list (or you can click the Microsoft Store tile if it’s available).ģ – Click the Search link located in the top-right corner of the Windows Store app.Ĥ – Type TP Clock into the Search box and then click TP Clock app after it pops up.ĥ – After the app info page pops up click the Install button.Ħ – Click the Launch button after it appears. This particular app is very lightweight in terms of the amount of system resources it uses.Īnd although it’s a very simple clock, it’s fairly attractive and it works extremely well. The one I happen to like best is named TP Clock. ![]() However, there are several decent analog clock apps available for free in the Microsoft Store. A simple-to-use analog clock for your desktop that features support for alarm and calendar tools. Rick’s answer: Geneva, for whatever reason Microsoft decided to remove the analog clock widget from Windows when they released Windows 10. Bitmap Live Tile Clock for Windows 10/8.1 1.0.0.5. Question from Geneva: When my computer had Windows 7 on it I had an analog clock on the desktop.Īfter I updated to Windows 10 the clock disappeared. ![]()
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