
Mac World Clock Widget Not Enough? Better Alternatives for Timezone Tracking
macOS World Clock Widget: What It Gets Right (And Wrong) macOS includes a built-in world clock widget that you can add to your desktop or notification center. It shows multiple timezones in a clean interface and syncs with your system clock. For casual timezone checking, it works fine. But if you're working with international teams, planning meetings across timezones, or constantly calculating "what time is it there?", the built-in widget falls short pretty quickly. The Limitations of Mac's Built-in World Clock The native world clock widget has some frustrating limitations: Limited timezone selection - You're stuck with major cities, so good luck if your colleague is in Adelaide or your client is in Reykjavik. No meeting planning tools - Want to find a good time for London, Tokyo, and New York? You're doing that math yourself. No availability tracking - There's no way to see when people are actually working, just what time it is. Static display - You can't slide forward and backward in
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