![]() The makers of the aforementioned World Clock Meeting Planner website also offer a great (and free!) time zone App for Windows 8 called World Clock – Time Zones.Īside from showing the current time for a configured city and various other information, you can select your pre-configured time zones and press the “Create Meeting” button at the bottom of the App and be directly taken to the above website with the selected cities already configured for you. This action launches the legacy Control Panel and its applet for managing date and time settings. In the right sidebar, click Add clocks for different time zones. In this case, 8am for San Francisco seems the best pick for all. Here is how to add an additional time zone clock in Windows 10: Go to Windows Settings using Win + I or any other shortcut you prefer. World Clock Meeting Planner gives you a color coded overview of suitable times for an on-line meeting. If you also have access to their calendars, you can then use Outlook's scheduling feature to see if they are truly available at that time. ![]() The result to you is presented in a color coded table so you can now more easily see which time slots are available for a meeting at a respectable time for everyone. Here you can fill out a form containing the day which you’d like to meet and the cities involved (or nearby). Whenever there are 3 or more time-zones involved, I prefer to use the World Clock Meeting Planner website. Note: Don’t try this in a week view or on a day where DST changes is taking place the time scale of Outlook doesn’t compensate for that! Easier method with World Clock Meeting Planner It’s painfully slow and cumbersome ( understatement!), but it is solvable in Outlook this way by changing the additional time zone to compare available times.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |