What are you looking forward to? See the seconds tick down to your vacation, wedding, or retirement. Share your countdown by copying the web address (URL). The countdown automatically adjusts for DST changes in the selected location.

Anticipation is contagious! If you're excited (or nervous) about an upcoming event, odds are, you're not the only one. Why not use our simple but powerful countdown generator to create a countdown clock, displaying the days, hours, minutes and seconds until the date of the event. You can share your newly created countdown, so it becomes a focal point for everyone involved.


How To Download Countdown Timer


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We've seen countdown timers used to generate buzz and anticipation around a party or vacation. Teams use them to stay on track and focussed, by ensuring team members have a sense of the time remaining until a critical milestone date. Event promoters and online marketers have reported significant boosts in conversion rates by using an online contdown timer to create urgency and drive action. Even NASA, uses a giant outdoor countdown clock to build anticipation and focus.

Countdowns are "sharing magnets"! A countdown to a date that means something to you and your network of friends or customers is something you want to share, right? Well guess what, so do your friends, and their friends.

We run a relatively small website but we see 200-500 social shares per day of countdowns that are displayed on our website. That does not including the thousands of our countdowns that have been shared around and embedded on other websites.

Recently a Seattle household made the news and went "viral" on Instagram with a simple display of the number of days remaining in Trump's current presidency term. Tom Petty fans were intruiged by a countdown that appeared on the official Tom Petty website in early 2018. The hugely popular video game, Fortnite received a huge amount of attention and press coverage after introducing mysterious, in-game counters, leaving fans fascinated as to what they were counting down to.Increase conversion rates using the magic of urgencyAs an online marketer or e-commerce company what's your worst enemy? For many it's customer procrastination. They want what you offer but they can always buy it later. Maybe they'll wait until they have more information, more money or more time. There are a million reasons to "do it later".

Dominant and successful online businesses such as Ebay, Amazon and Booking.com make extensive use of urgency as a means to drive action and increase conversions. You can barely visit a successful online store, or ticketing/booking website without being exposed to urgency or scarcity-based marketing tactics. "Less than 5 tickets left at this price", "Hurry, only 3 days until sale ends" or "Order by 5pm to receive next day shipping". These companies are ruthlessly analytical and their tactics are driven by data and experimentation. They use these tactics because they have proven to be effective. Countdown timers are a crucial tool in your urgency-marketing toolbox.Busy? It won't take a moment with our simple but powerful countdown maker!I made this quick video to show how simple it is to create a countdown and embed in it a blog or website.

Mobile web browsing has exploded - if you run a website you may find that more than half your visitors are using smartphones or tablets. Our countdown clocks use mobile friendly code and run very little code on the user's device meaning they won't slow down or otherwise interfere with the user experience. We go beyond mobile-friendly by auto-generating a double-resolution version of your countdown to take advantage of Retina, and other high-resolution displays that are common on many of today's most popular devices.

We have two layers of protection built in. Firstly, the code we issue is contained in an iframe, the browser's same-origin policy prevents the iframe content from accessing code in your page, effectivly isolating our code from your website's code. Secondly we serve all our countdowns over an encrypted connection, this prevents hackers from altering the countdown before it loads into your page.

We want your countdown clock to look great, always. Every browser and operating system displays web content a little differently though. Assuming that every browser will render our countdowns with the antialiasing-level, font leading and kerning and effect compositing we want was unthinkable. That's why all our countdowns are pre-rendered by our team of Mac OS X servers so they look just right. We then cache the rendered content at edge locations all over the world so the can be delivered to your visitor, fast.

Page load time is an important factor in visitor satisfaction as well as in search engine ranking algorithms. Be careful when using third party widgets as some of them contain blocking JavaScript code or large files which can negatively impact page load times. Because our countdowns are pre-rendered the code download is very small. We also use edge caching strategies to deliver your countdowns from the location nearest to each user. When we do need to load content from the main server we use sophisticated in-memory caching to pull the data directly from RAM which is faster than reading from a hard disc.

Set the hour, minute, and second for the online countdown timer, and start it. Alternatively, you can set the date and time to count days, hours, minutes, and seconds till (or from) the event. The timer triggered alert will appear, and the pre-selected sound will be played at the set time.

Just want a timer to show when our transfer switch will switch back to normal utility power. I have a tag that shows we are on regular utility power and another that shows that generator is running. Want to show a timer when regular utility power is restored. It takes 15 minutes to transfer.

I built this rather nice thing (with the help of @Darren_Murphy) which is an actual countdown. And the nice colors are thanks to CSS wizardry from @Lucas_Pires.

Screenshot 2021-04-23 at 18.41.388241670 80.2 KB Screenshot 2021-04-23 at 18.42.388341690 83 KB Screenshot 2021-04-23 at 18.43.458321682 83.7 KB

I applied it to your need to change pages. The Home page will automatically open Page 1 after 6 seconds (to demonstrate the capability quicker) and then Page 1 will go back to Home automatically after 60 seconds. There are examples of how to pause, restart, reset, cancel it. To change the timer duration, simply set the text on timer1 to any number (of seconds). To change the timer resolution (check its time value more or less frequently) just set it to change states every N milliseconds (e.g., 500 for every half-second or 10000 for every 10 seconds) and change your decrement value accordingly.

Once set up, all you need to do to change the duration is change the value of the timer1 widget in State 1 of the Timer Control dynamic panel. You can reset it again and again if needed, and set up multiple timers to run at the same time.

This article focuses on the Countdown timer web part, which allows you to display a count down (or count up) to an event. You can add a title, set the date format, add a description, and a call to action button with a link.

I use MailTimers to create email countdown timers. There are a lot of customized timer templates. Image quality much better than competitors. I also use evergreen countdown timers.

How to create email countdown timer

Hi Tom,


I would like to also add a countdown timer to an event landing page but absolutely have no idea on how to do this. The countdown is to the upcoming GDPR date, 25th May and would like to add this to the event landing page. -partner-forum-deadline-day-and-beyond#register-form

So the timer works. If I hard code this.state with a specific countdown number, the timer begins counting down once the page loads. I want the clock to start counting down on a button click and have a function which changes the null of the state to a randomly generated number. I am a bit new to React. I am know that useState() only sets the initial value but if I am using a click event, how do I reset useState()? I have been trying to use setCountdown(ranNum) but it crashes my app. I am sure the answer is obvious but I am just not finding it.

Basically I am making a text based "game" (Not so much a game, more of a way to improve basic java skills and logic). However, as part of it I wish to have a timer. It would count down on the time I wish from the variable to 0. Now, I have seen a few ways to do this with a gui, however, is there a way to do this without a gui/jframe etc.

i want to make a timer who makes my game run for 60 seconds, after that you should go to the game over screen, doesnt matter if you are still alive or not. It should just show your score, which it already does when you die. But i want the game to end on that timer.

I took the timer that Peter had posted and trimmed it down smaller, no scroll bars, soft color, off to the upper left of screen and had it call a large display text window when done (so that I have to address it!).

It also captures the current system volume setting, turns it up to xx, then restores the volume when done.

The standalone macro can take an extra argument -- the task name. If no name needed, just leave it blank. If a task name is provided, the timer window is a little bit larger. If can show up to 7 letters long. If the task name is more than 7 letters, we can resize the timer window.

The Alfred workflow takes only one argument, i.e., the timer duration. It will not take a task name.

This forum does not accept .alfredworkflow extension file. I need to zip the workflow file and KM macro.

Thx so much this is exactly what I was looking for. What do I alter to get the timer to display in a different screen location? currently it appears in the center. also anyway to make it more transparent? 2351a5e196

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