AnalogueClock.com was built to be left open. There is no signup, no account, no tracking of your preferences across devices — theme, clock face, and scene are stored only in your browser. Here are six everyday ways people leave it running.
1. A focus clock for Pomodoro and deep work
Open the wall clock on a second monitor. Pair it with a 25-minute timer and let the second hand sweep in the corner of your eye — no notifications, no countdown nagging.
2. A silent meditation timer
Switch to smooth-seconds mode and a Minimal face. The slow arc of the hand becomes a visual breath — calmer than a beeping countdown, easier to settle into than a digit.
3. A teaching aid in classrooms
Children learn to read time visually before they learn it numerically. Cast the clock to a classroom display and use the Roman or Classic face for traditional dial recognition practice.
4. A studio clock for podcasters and streamers
Recording engineers and broadcast studios have used analogue dials for a century — they read at a glance without breaking the on-air flow. A browser tab on a side screen does the same job for free.
5. A night-stand clock with a dimmed dark theme
Prop a tablet beside the bed, switch to dark mode, and pick the Modern face. No glaring digits at 3am — just two slim hands on a deep background.
6. A waiting-room or reception display
Offices, clinics, gyms, and front desks can pin the wall clock on a TV. It looks intentional, costs nothing, and never needs winding.
Get started
Start with the main clock, try the full-screen wall clock, or browse the clock-face gallery to pick a dial that suits your room.