I am writing a python code for implementing an alarm clock where I am putting some YouTube links in text file and the program will read the file. I have to set time whatever I want in any format and at that particular time program will pick a random link from those which are saved in the file and start playing.But in the if else part my program is falling in a infinite loop.

May I suggest that rather than loop and constantly compare the current time with your alarm clock time, you rather use the time.sleep() function. Subtract the current time from your alarm time and sleep for that number of seconds.


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I'm pleasantly surprised by how well the stock alarm clock handled populating the Duna system with relay's, Ike mining facilities and a Duna surface mission. Got the last in a stable Duna orbit just now. It was my first go in fully using the stock alarm system. Playing latest version stock + DLC + Kerbal RnD.

4 Launches, 20 day's apart around the Duna transfer window. 11 spacecrafts and probes together. I set alarms for all correction burns, orbital insertions etc. The whole mission took about a week in the making. Even over saving, closing and rebooting the next day, and again, the stock alarm clock stayed persistend.

I came back to KSP recently and was excited about the feature. I haven't had any of the severe problems people have quoted here, but what really bugs me is that it doesn't make it easy to swap to the craft that the alarm is for. I feel like this is such an essential feature of the original mod that I can't believe they didn't do this. Am I holding it wrong?

The Dres window came, so I got my probe into Kerbin orbit and started plotting a standard transfer, first to raise my Apoapsis, then a second to plane-change. If I'd gone through with it, I would miss Dres entirely. You can see the stock alarm clock says that the transfer window starts in 3 hours here.

I'm using the Construction Time mod so I have to build my ships ahead of time to plan for the window, and also the Snacks mod for life support so I can't have my crewed interplanetary ships sitting in orbit for 50+ days wasting life support resources I need for the mission because the alarm's transfer window was wrong.

Why do the Stock alarm clock and the Stock maneuver tool give such different days for when it's time to transfer to other planets? Because they're both Stock, shouldn't they be working off the same set of data?

Hi, I have already integrated most of the stuff, unfortunately I still have a problem left. I previously used home asisstant and there I had a trigger set which was the alarm clock on my phone. How do you replicate this in SmartThings? I would like the corresponding automation to trigger when the alarm clock on the phone goes off. Do you have any ideas on how to do this?

You could use Tasker to react to the alarm events on the phone and then either use the SharpTools Tasker plugins to control a SmartThings device or the Tasker HTTP action to call a SharpTools.io Rule Engine rule.

This post draws inspiration from a user on the SmartThings community who wanted to know how they could trigger an action in their smart home 10 minutes before the next alarm clock on their Android phone. They had found a Reddit post where a user had...

Alarm Clock is a fully-featured alarm clock for use with an AppIndicator implementation. It's easy to use yet powerful with support for multiple repeatable alarms, as well as snoozing and a flexible notification system.

As the original creator of alarm-clock, it makes me very happy to hand over the maintainership to @tatokis.He has already made significant contributions to the code base, including porting the project to Gtk 3, GSettings, GtkApplication, GActions and a more modern CMake build system.All of these improvements should also enable alarm-clock-applet to be packaged in modern Linux distributions.I am confident that the project will thrive under his leadership.

Many dependencies have changed and the project is now built with CMake. If available, please build with GConf2 support enabled so that people can migrate any old alarms they might have, even if they built from source previously. If possible, also add playerctl as an optional/recommended dependency; its presence is detected at runtime.

Alarm Clock supports two types of alarms: Clocks and Timers. The Clock will go off at a specific time of day while the Timer will ring after the specified amount of time.

Then, you can click the big button below to install!

 Yes, I want it!

 This will install the alarm-clock-applet package. If the button above does not work, you can also install it using the terminal by running

Lately, I have been plagued with that cutesey "Alarm clock" error indication while trying to debug my mutt ".muttrc" file. The main problem turned out to be a combination of the "set smtp_url" parameter and msmtp's connect_timeout parameter. Local internet service is spotty at best, and thus the timeout problems.

MAIN PROBLEM:When I sent a multi-line text file to mutt via the command line: cat report.out | mutt -s "Summary" "[email protected]"mutt repeatedly blew up with the cryptic message Alarm clockI wasted considerable time chasing the problem within mutt. There WAS one problem, but the main culprit was in .msmtprc instead. Fix it first.

Alarms clocks and I have a damaged relationship. Friends notice me wince every time I'm watching a movie and a character's alarm blares them awake with all of the subtlety and gentleness of an aircraft carrier slamming into the sun. And don't get me started about how, when I was a kid, my dad would wake me up for school by thrusting the window curtains open as if he were opening the Ark of the Covenant right in my face. Waking up to a sunrise alarm is, by stark contrast, downright pleasant. And if you're like most of us, you need more sleep.

Sunrise alarms simulate gradual sunsets at night and gradual sunrises in the morning to help you fall asleep and wake up more naturally by tricking your biological hardware. I've tested the best sunrise alarm clocks, and a few of the worst. These are my favorites.

My apartment was the perfect lab for testing these alarms. In my bedroom, I hang blackout curtains because I live on a busy city street that's somehow brighter at night than during the day. I'm a heavy sleeper who doesn't have a problem waking up, but that doesn't mean I enjoy it. Every morning I lurch out of bed like a crash-test dummy flying through an invisible windshield and run for coffee. When I woke up with (most of) these sunrise alarms, I had an easier transition into consciousness.

You can dim or turn off the LED display. For people like me, who have always hated seeing glowing numbers in an otherwise dark room, the latter is a great option. I'll never understand why more alarms don't offer it. It's a steal at $40, especially with the extras like multicolor mood lighting, access to an FM radio, and a center Snooze button that's easy to hit.

Why is this so heavy? And big? Those were my first thoughts when I took Philips' alarm out of the box. It reminded me of my college job at a hot rod shop, lugging around headlights from old 1950s Mercurys and Chevys. That's a good thing. The Philips HF3520 oozes build quality and is easily the nicest alarm in this guide. It has the usual features, such as an audible alarm, five natural wake-up sounds, and an FM radio.

This would be my top pick if it wasn't so expensive; It's five times the price of the Homelabs, but it's not five times the alarm. Perhaps it's worth it if you have a particularly large bedroom and want the extra light for reading as you settle into bed. It is nicer to look at, though.

You've got to hand it to Casper for intuitive design. To start the sunset program before bed, just flip the alarm over. There's a button on top to pause and unpause it, and when it's sitting on the charging pad, just turn it to adjust the brightness. Everything else, like setting wake-up schedules and adjusting the length of the sunsets and sunrises in 15-minute increments (up to 90 minutes), is controlled through the app.

Of all the sunrise alarms I tested, this was the best at evenly lighting up a dark room. It's also the only wireless model I tested, so I could start a sunset in the living room and bring it with me into the bedroom later. But it's $130 and doesn't have a clock, a radio, or an audible wake-up buzzer. If you ban your phone from your nightstand every night and need an alarm that can be programmed to scream at you precisely at 6:30 am, you'll need a different sunrise alarm.

The WiiM is the easiest alarm I've used. There is very little learning curve: Just load the Light app onto your smartphone, and plug the lamp into an outlet. As soon as you open the app it'll automatically discover the lamp. Well-designed screens walk you through the setup. The WiiM's app explains everything clearly, and there are physical buttons for snooze, brightness, volume, light modes, and mute.

Some sunrise alarms have too few buttons, making you go into the app for every little action. Some have too many buttons, making it feel cluttered. The WiiM has all the necessary buttons and leaves the rarely touched settings for the app, unlike the Casper above.

After testing some of the more affordable options on this list, I was ready to say I couldn't recommend a $270 alarm clock. But the SmartSleep, formerly known as the Somneo, nailed the basics of what a sunrise alarm should be, then piled on a bunch of customizable features you won't find on other devices. First off, the light spreads over the walls like warm butter. It's somewhat directional, but the hole in the middle and convex shape casts light at wider angles than other directional alarms. The light quality is slightly ahead of the other premium alarms on this list, and you can select from four light profiles.

The Zenergy has the most relaxing sounds before bed and when waking up in the morning. There are 15(!) of them. Some sounds, like those they call Heartbeat and Trance, remind me of science fiction films like Event Horizon, but most of them are more natural and offer a very calming effect. Storm, Chimes, and River are my favorites. There's also a guided breathing exercise where a voice instructs you when to take in breaths, hold them, and release them over a soothing track in the background, and it gets me in the mood for bed every time. The see-through cloth cover allows the digital clock and menu items to shine through while hiding unlit display settings that aren't in use. A premium touch. ff782bc1db

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