software

Weather Alarm Clock 1.3

Accord   on 21 August 2006 - 19:07 · 5 comments & 6619 views

Advertisement (Why?)
Get things done and don't forget your umbrella using this customizable clock with exact time, alarms, current weather conditions, forecasts and different skins.

Weather Alarm Clock is a replacement for the standard Windows system clock, that offers:
- integrated weather information (current and forecast),
- custom alarm functions,
- time synchronization and
- a variety of different skins to choose from.

It supports one-time and recurring reminders as well as hourly chimes, display of a secondary time zone, and can also open programs or files associated with an alarm.

Download: Free trial of Weather Alarm Clock | setup (zip) | 1.4 MB (Shareware $17.95 US)
Screenshot: >> Click here <<
View: Weather Alarm Clock homepage

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 5 additional comments
#1 beatlesdb on 21 Aug 2006 - 23:46
People pay for this? looks like the old weather bar - I'll stick with my free Yahoo widget thanks anyway

[edit] I should expand on this - I just think that for $17.95 the software does not offer anything substancial that you could not get with a range of weather bars for free

Last edited by beatlesdb on 22 Aug 2006 - 01:13
#2 naap51stang on 21 Aug 2006 - 23:54
Same here.........why pay for something that you can get for free anyway.
I've used weather pulse for years, never had a problem with it.
#3 joker999 on 22 Aug 2006 - 00:02
ugly
#4 Accord on 23 Aug 2006 - 06:05
beatlesdb and naap51stang
As you can see this software is not only the weather bar. It is also an alarm clock, a time synchronizer, a tray clock replacement and it has options to customize the look of your clock using different skins.
#5 cork1958 on 26 Aug 2006 - 11:16
Same here.........why pay for something that you can get for free anyway

Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!

Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.

Advertisement (Why?)