T-Clock Redux Changelog

What's new in T-Clock Redux 2.4.4 Build 492 RC

Jan 28, 2018
  • new Lock, Sleep and Hibernate options for "Exit Windows" menu (#121)
  • new command line options: /exit-explorer & /restart-explorer (#24)
  • including "Restart Explorer" menu item for the advanced context menu (hold either Shift of Ctrl when opening T-Clock's menu)
  • Note: this options tries to properly exit Explorer.exe but will kill it if it takes more than 15 seconds. Desktop icons etc. should be saved anyway, but it might have side effeccs. (if so, report them please)
  • Note for Windows 2k/XP users: it'll always kill your Explorer.exe but icons etc. should be saved anyway.
  • fixed ISO week number format Wi (#128)
  • fixed numeric weekday format wi (#120)
  • fixed multi-monitor support on Windows 10 CU ("Ink Workspace" button issue, #126)
  • fixed some Clock positioning issues on all versions of Windows (#87, #113)
  • Watch List sort indicators now work on older version of Windows (#82)
  • fixed Calendar keyboard focus when tabbing in/out of Calendar (#69)
  • fixed "Display Properties" on Windows 10 (from the DC forum)
  • fixed file browse dialog within T-Clock from messing up T-Clock's command execution (#84)
  • some miscellaneous corrections

New in T-Clock Redux 2.4.3 Build 471 Beta (Nov 13, 2017)

  • "turn off monitors on workstation lock" got improved. (#57)
  • It now waits 5 seconds before turning the monitors off and also continues to turn off the monitor if interrupted.
  • the calendar can now also be closed by pressing ESC (#62)
  • improved Windows 10 calendar detection
  • update checker supports UTF-8 now
  • fixed "skip version" not working for beta versions (#63)
  • downgrading T-Clock from a newer version which converted some settings, is now possible without a bogus warning about settings loss.
  • fixed portable mode being unable to convert/create the settings file with UTF-16
  • fixed crash on context menu calling on 32bit Vista+
  • dynamic update check period based on age of release, checks:
  • every 3 hours within the first 24 hours after release
  • daily within the first week,
  • every other day during the first 21 days,
  • weekly for the first 90 days
  • and every 14 days after that
  • This change not only reduced network traffic, but also makes sure that a faulty release gets fixed in a timely manner.