There's already quite a few desktop apps that show different time zones you'd commonly look up. Can't see what this is doing that's so different/better.
@rrhoover No question that it doing one thing and one thing well.
To me, it's more about how well any and all such single-use tools fit into (or make me deviate from) my existing workflow & habits (which includes Googling).
I'm a Windows user and in v8 or 7, you can simply configure the clock to show 3 time zones when you hover over it: http://windows.microsoft.com/en-...
I also know people who, like you, need to see more than 3 timezones and use this: http://apps.microsoft.com/window... (@erictwillis & @jasoncrawford mentioned the web version of this)
Not sure what a Mac alternative might be but it's hard to imagine that someone on PH doesn't know of one.
Hey, this is my thing.nnThere are heaps of others out there. I found the best designed focused on lots of timezones rather than two or three.nnWould love to hear feedback if/when you have a use for it.
@jasoncrawford I use timeanddate.com as well. However, this does have a really nice design and it does just one thing very nicely.
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Perfect that it defaults to Melbourne. That's my company (Redbubble) headquarters. I've been trying a few things to help with the time difference. Adding another timezone to Google Calendar is helpful, but it doesn't note the difference in day. The other web tools are fine, but they require entering times, sliding things, etc. This seems dead simple, and I'll give it a try.
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