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World Clock is a desktop clock for Windows. It's designed to make an interesting and attractive feature on your desktop. It shows the current time and date, plus the local time in major cities you select, overlaid on a world map, which can be shaded to show day, night and twilight areas.
The map display is configurable so you can choose the best view for your location. The options are:
- Whole world, centered on Europe
- Whole world, centered on North America
- Whole world, centered on Australasia
- Europe, Middle East and central Asia
- North America
You can choose, from a database of over 100 cities, which locations to display on the map.
World Clock can pop up a calendar showing the dates for the whole year at a glance.
World Clock can set your computer's system clock using an atomic clock that can be accessed over the Internet. You can choose whether to do this manually, or automatically, using World Clock's internal software or the Windows Time Service (Win2K and XP.) If you have dial-up Internet access, World Clock will wait until you start an Internet connection before trying to contact the atomic clock to perform the update. NEW selectable skins let you change the look of World Clock to match your Windows color scheme or theme.
World Clock can run in the system tray, or as a normal application. It runs on Windows 98, Windows Me, Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000 and Windows XP.
tech-pro world clock world map clock calendar time zone atomic clock desktop clock calendar world
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BubbleClock are analog clocks and reminder with semitransparent effect (only Windows 2000/XP). Various kinds of clock skins. Synchronization your computer clock via the Internet NIST Internet Time Service of National Institute of Standards and Technology USA. Map of time zones with the indication of current time in each time zone (country).Various types of alarm.
timezone map time zone map map zone reminder clock bubbleclock semitransparent transparent translucent semitransparent
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Roll Call is an employee in and out board and a secure instant messaging system. The main fallacy of in and out boards is people forget to change their status. With Roll Call, you only need to remember to change it when you leave your desk, not when you return. When you click your mouse or type on your keyboard for the first time after being away from your desk, Roll Call will automatically change your status to "desk". If you happen to leave your desk and forget to change your status, Roll Call will change it to "idle" after a given amount of time. When you remember to change your status, Roll Call makes it easy by allowing you to type a hotkey or select a status from a popup menu that is presented when Roll Call's tray icon is right clicked. For instance, you can define a hotkey to change your status to "lunch", another to "home", etc. No matter what the forefront application is, you can enter a key sequence to change your status. Roll Call's tray icon also graphically represents what your status is. When you change your status, Roll Call saves you time by defaulting to a reasonable return time. If "lunch" or "break", the current time plus the typical amount of time you take for lunch or a break respectively. If "home", the next business day at your typical arrival time. The calculation of the next business day considers company holidays that you provide and weekends. Roll Call provides additional information. Associated with each employee record is a notes section, group list, email address and a phone list. Groups are useful because the employee list can be filtered to only show those associated with a particular group.
employee in out board office electronic software network where find locate
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