Nice review. Two of my wall clocks use the WWVB signal, or rather used to use it because these days with houses full of various "devices" that very weak signal (unless you're near Colorado), the signal gets "lost in the noise".
Mister , thanks for the video, but im looking for clock like this but i need it to be battery operated clock cuz i dont have an electric outlet near it. which one would you recommend, thanks a lot.
What's the Amazon link? Or at least the product name and manufacturer? Actually answered my own question, the manufacturer is XREXS, and there's a 35% off code so it's about $35 delivered in the USA.
Nice clock, this wifi thing is awesome, but in some cases this connected devices can represent a security risk in your network. I don't know how this clock works, I'm just wondering how secure the connection is. Some IoT devices were hacked in the past. I would prefer something based on Bluetooth, like the G-shock app, to set up the clock.
It's a quartz movement, so it will probably show good time as well as any other clock or watch with a quartz movement. Even if it couldn't update for a whole week, the time would probably still be very good.
Este reloj TXL led grande de pared color azul cielo, Amazon DEFINITIVAMENTE no lo COMPRE usted se arrepentirá, se atrasa a la semana dos minutos, está advertido. Ah!!! lo compré en Amazon por $1294 pesos mexicanos como 60 dólares aproximadamente. OJO CHEQUE
Just a piece of advice... It would be much better for you to keep 24hour format time and celsius temperature reading, because those are superior formats. No one even uses fahrenheits, and AM/PM is just redundant.
@@SuperMrgentleman LOL 20% of what? What GDP has anything to do with that? Only USA and a few islands use Fahrenheit. Celsius is reasonable, rational and logical, it's decimal and it's based on the properties of water. It works perfectly for weather as well.
I agree. The US is far behind the rest of the world when it comes to global standards for time, temp and units of measurement. It's laughable how the only people in the US who understand 24 hour time are emergency personnel, military, medical people and pilots (and others in aviation). Regular civilians are completely mystified by it. It's pathetic.
@@17cmmittlererminenwerfer81 Especially when Celsius and metric format is also used by the US science community. And let's not forget M/D/Y format, which is totally illogical and completely ridiculous.
@@damyr Sorry, Farenheit is better for humans. Celsius has to be expressed as negatives and decimals to be useful for ordinary human-experienced temperatures. That's silly. Farenheit is nice and comfy, with 0-99 encapsuling humans at ordinary, civilized earth temperatures. You don't need to use decimals to describe the temperature, as one degree is just a perfectly good increment in the range of human experience. And, at just a glance if it's negative it's too darn cold and if there's a third digit you know it's too darn hot and by 110 you're not staying out for long. If you want to run a science experiment and start smelting ores or looking at the temperature of Venus or Neptune, sure, use Celsius. But for a wall clock, to tell myself as a human what earth temperature it is, Farenheit is way better.