An analog clock with a 6 month scrollable calendar display. The calendar covers 21 months; 4 prior months and 16 months into the future.
Be the first to post a text review of Analog Clock / Calendar. Rate and review a project by clicking thumbs up or thumbs down in the right column.
For Windows users: Create a directory C:\Program Files\Analog Clock Copy the analogclock.jar file to C:\Program Files\Analog Clock On your empty desktop, right click and select New -> Shortcut Copy the following string, and paste it into the location of the item text box: %windir%\system32\javaw.exe -Xms32m -Xmx32m -jar "C:\Program Files\Analog Clock\analogclock.jar" In the name for this shortcut text box, type Clock - Calendar (Note the dash. A slash doesnt work here.) If you want to change the icon, right click on the Clock - Calendar shortcut and select Properties. Change the Start in text box to "C:\Program Files\Analog Clock" (include the quote marks), and change the icon to whatever Windows system icon you think fits. I used a white arrow on a green background pointing to the right.
We are happy to announce Release 1.0 of the Analog Clock / Calendar. This Java Swing Dialog measures 1097 x 522 pixels. Its a large display, but the display is a nice analog clock with a 21 month calendar. The calendar shows the 4 prior months and 16 months into the future. For those of you in an office environment, the Analog Clock / Calendar periodically presses the Alt key when the dialog has focus. This keeps those pesky screen savers from coming on after a period of inactivity, and keeps you from having to log back in all day.
Be the first person to add a text review.
Copyright © 2010 Geeknet, Inc. All rights reserved. Terms of Use
Thanks for your rating!
Would you also like to write a review?
Thanks for your review!
Get credit for your review by logging in via OpenID. Click your account provider: