Grab that bad boy and slide to the right and suddenly the time and day starts advancing…in all the cities at once! You can drag as far as three days in advance and see what time it will be in those other cities when you get to the time you want in your own time zone. On the bottom of the window there’s a slider. So far it’s just like the world clock but this is where it gets good. Once you put in all your cities, you can flip TimeScroller back over, and now it will show the current time next to your location and the relative times in all the other cities. Now this was a little bit troublesome for me because iIm worse at geography than I am at time zones, but I eventually found Dublin for Bar, Brussels for all of my Belgians, Hobart Australia for Rose, and Perth for the curiously silent lately Jane. You open the dashboard, flip it over, and choose your home city. He found a Dashboard widget called TimeScroller from. Well Nick was not to be dissuaded, and evidently he’s a big old dashboard widget hound because he found the PERFECT tool to fix my time zone issue. What I need is something to tell me what time it will be in the future, so if I ask Knightwise to meet with me at 10am my time on Saturday, what time will it be in Belgium on Saturday? I explained that I DO use that, but that only tells you what time it is NOW in those other cities. Later this week Nick Brennan tweeted me asking why I don’t just use the world clock widget on OSX – which allows you to set clocks to all different cities. So it’s become a lovely internet joke that I’m impaired time-zone-wise, but I still contend that it’s really hard! Last week Allister from New Zealand sent in that great explanation of how to use GMT to do the math, which if I practice I might be able to get to work. Ootunes Radio can be found at TimeScroller Thanks Paul!įor a slightly longer review, Scott Rutowksi joins us to talk about Ootunes Radio for streaming audio for the iPhone. Paul is a man of few words but he included a link to the iTunes Store for Mobile Fotos, and a link to his Flickr gallery he made with Mobile Fotos. Paul Burns called in with the shortest ever application review, let’s listen in (don’t let you mind wander or you’ll miss it – it’s only 47 seconds long! ![]() Elsie is a yoga instructor who loves technology – you gotta go check out her site! Congratulations to both of you! ![]() A lot of people sent in their names, but only two could win, and I’m pleased to announce that the first goes to Arjan Labruyere who says he lives “near Belgium” – he knows I have a soft spot in my head for Belgians i guess! The second goes to Elsie Escobar of. I knocked that show out last week in about 17 minutes! Oh wait, I remember, I didn’t do much of the recording, everyone else did the work, maybe that’s why! I like the company here, I really do – missed you guys bothering me while I work! I suppose we should get started then?īack on show number 217 on August 2nd I did a review of some super cool software called Voila, and the awesome developer I worked with on it, Guru offered up two free copies of Voila to lucky NosillaCast listeners. Well it’s nice to be back in the saddle again with all the goofballs in the live chat room, but I gotta tell you, it’s WAY easier to do this without, “help”. Today is Sunday August 23rd, 2009 and this is show number 220. Matt Hillyer from reviews the Tom Tom iPhone application. The PowerStick from Ecosol solves travel power problems. Typinator from Ergonis Software takes a shot at the top spot as a snippet replacement tool, BJ demonstrates the Logitech ClearChat Comfort USB Headset. Paul Burns tells us about Mobile Fotos – Flickr Browser & Uploader, and Scott Rutowski tells us about Ootunes radio from Drew sent in TimeScroller from which SOLVES my time zone challenge perfectly.
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