International Color Time Clock (2024)

About This Clock

If you were the only person on the planet, chances are you wouldn't bother having a clock. We use them primarily to synchronize ourselves with other people, so that lunch dates and meetings and phone calls can happen without one party or the other having to wait around for a long time. We just agree on a time when we'll both be there. Clocks have been pretty useful for this - until now.

As it becomes easier and easier to pass things and information around the planet at lightning speed, we find that our social and work lives are increasingly globalized. Our friends, families, workmates and clients are spread out all over the planet. We want to schedule net meetings and phone calls with them, we want to meet online to chat or play games, and there's something getting in the way a lot more often than it used to:

Time zones.

It's hard to keep track of how many hours the time gap is between where you're standing and where your overseas distributor is located, whether you're speaking in terms of your local time or theirs, and whether to add or subtract the difference when figuring out what your watch should say when you make the call. It's worse if either or both of you happen to be traveling, which is increasingly the case now that we all have cell phones, and the fact that there's also Daylight Saving Time which starts and ends on different days in different countries makes things enormously complicated. Some of us waste a lot of time trying to clarify these details (and then we screw it up anyway).

Wouldn't it be nice, and much simpler, if we could all agree on what time it was, all over the world? At first I thought we should just use unaltered Greenwich Mean Time for everything and call it a day. I'd be all right with that, frankly. Computers do it. The only problem is that we've all become accustomed to having certain numbers line up with certain parts of the day, and having the clock "roll over" in the middle of the night (and also at mid-day if you're using the 12-hour system). To move the numbers feels peculiar, and to change them more for some people than for others feels unfair.

This is an inherent problem with any time marking system that uses numbers, or letters, or anything else where there is a hierarchy and a point where you return to the beginning. What would be better is a time marking system that forms a natural loop without feeling like it has any particular beginning or end, and without us having habitual expectations about which part of the cycle lines up with which part of the day. That's where the color wheel comes in.

We can simply decide that at some particular point, the time is "orange," everywhere on the planet. Later on it will be yellow, green, teal, blue, maroon, and so on, and eventually orange again. In my part of the world, people tend to wake up in the blue range, eat lunch around lavender and get off work at orange, but elsewhere it may be that you wake up at yellow and have dinner at purple. Neither seems to make more sense than the other, which is exactly the point. And then if we want to have a phone call, we can arrange to speak at thirty minutes past indigo, and there is no confusion about exactly when that means.

And so I decided to implement this clock, as an arbitrary standard for coordinating time around the globe.

Early Versions

The first version of the clock used a basic algorithmic color wheel, with a hue moving smoothly around the RGB space like a color-picker in a graphics program. It was simple, and it was bright. Unfortunately, the values didn't vary quickly enough in many cases, so that a whole hour might pass by with very little discernable difference in the color. The savvy time consumer will want to be able to tell one hour from the next, so something had to be done.

I tried varying the saturation of colors in addition to the hue to get a little more variety. It helped, but was still not enough. I tried schemes based on HSV instead of RGB, but ultimately no simple function was satisfactory. The fact that the human eye can detect more subtle variations in color in different parts of the spectrum proved problematic.

What you see here is not a simple algorithmic function, instead, it is hand-crafted to try to get an effective spread of viewable colors around the dial. It is neither perfect nor optimal - nor can it be, since the ability to discern color differences varies between individual humans - but it's not bad.

This is still a bit of a beta version... comments welcome!

What About the Color Blind?

What about the color blind, you may ask. And well you should - there are more color blind people around than you realize. I know some, and so do you. Fortunately, colors have names, and even someone who is completely blind will be able to tell the difference between "half past pink" and "9 minutes to mustard."

A Caveat About Color Names

As anyone who has ever had a discussion about color with another person can tell you, it is not possible to come to universal agreement about what constitutes orange versus red, much less lavender versus lilac. There are physiological reasons for this, with studies indicating that men and women experience color differently, and that no two individuals perceive color exactly the same way. With that in mind, although I did solicit some feedback on what to call the twenty-four colors that mark the hours, I pretty much just named them by fiat, because decisions had to be made. You can send me email to complain that gold should be marigold or lavender should be lilac, and I might listen... but probably not.

Droid App

The official Color Time Clock Android app has disappeared from the marketplace, I think they took it down because I was not responding toadministrative messages or failed to update to a modern API or something. I can probably rectify this one of these days, but in the meantime, you can use this web page and watch this space for updates.

iPhone App

Coming later in response to the inevitable demand. Until then, use the web page and watch this space.

Further Agitating About Daylight Saving In Particular

Can be found here.

The Official International Color Time Poem

I wrote this as part of my Poem of the Week series, some years ago when I was first postulating International Color Time.

Love on International Color Time

I saw you first at half maroon
We talked til peach obscured the moon
Now here it is banana hue
And every tint I think of you
Meet me by the old caboose
At seven shades beyond chartreuse
Just before the neon lime
Bring a brush and we can paint the time

The Date

But Dave... what about the date? Isn't that still--Quiet, troublemaker! Just enjoy the clock.

International Color Time Clock (2024)

FAQs

What color symbolizes time? ›

Yellow is connected to time and time perception. By its lightweight quality it tends to feel faster than red, which has a heavier weight. Speed is connected to lightning. “Quick as lightning” is an english proverb.

What is the official world clock? ›

Coordinated Universal Time or UTC is the primary time standard globally used to regulate clocks and time. It establishes a reference for the current time, forming the basis for civil time and time zones. UTC facilitates international communication, navigation, scientific research, and commerce.

How does international time work? ›

It's based on two measurements: the ticking of hundreds of ultra-stable atomic clocks (International Atomic Time) and the rotation of the Earth (Universal Time). Nations across the world set their local time by adding or subtracting from UTC depending on their position on the globe.

What time is it with seconds? ›

04:11:16 P.M.

Which color is best for day time? ›

When selecting a color for daytime events, it's best to opt for light and bright hues that exude freshness, vibrancy, and positivity.
  • Pastel Shades: Soft pastel colors like baby pink, powder blue, mint green, and lavender are perfect choices for daytime functions. ...
  • Sunny Y.
May 25, 2020

What is color blue hour? ›

During the blue "hour", red light passes through space while blue light is scattered in the atmosphere, and thus reaches Earth's surface. Blue hour usually lasts about 20–96 minutes right after sunset and right before sunrise. Time of year, location, and air quality all have an influence on the exact time of blue hour.

Who controls the time in the world? ›

The international coordination of time is controlled by the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service, IERS.

What is the international nuclear clock? ›

The Doomsday Clock is set every year by the Bulletin's Science and Security Board in consultation with its Board of Sponsors, which includes nine Nobel laureates. The Clock has become a universally recognized indicator of the world's vulnerability to global catastrophe caused by man-made technologies.

What country starts the day first? ›

Facts dependent on the IDL

According to the clock, the first areas to experience a new day and a New Year are islands that use UTC+14:00. These include portions of the Republic of Kiribati, including Millennium Island in the Line Islands.

How do you read international time? ›

For example, if you are in London and it is 11pm, align 'London' with 11 on your watch face. To find out what the time is in Moscow, swap to the 24-hour dial and read the time that aligns with Moscow, which would be 1am. At the same time, you can tell the time in all the other cities.

Is there a master clock for the world? ›

A modern atomic version of a master clock can be found at the U.S. Naval Observatory. Maintained by the USNO Time Service Department, it's used by a large portion of the world's communications, scientific and financial infrastructure to ensure accuracy.

How long is in a minute? ›

The minute is a unit of time defined as equal to 60 seconds. One hour contains 60 minutes. Although not a unit in the International System of Units (SI), the minute is accepted for use in the SI.

What is the USA time now in India? ›

This Is an Old Version
LocationLocal TimeTime Zone
New Delhi (India – Delhi)Sunday, May 5, 2024 at 6:05:42 amIST
New York (USA – New York)Saturday, May 4, 2024 at 8:35:42 pmEDT
Corresponding UTC (GMT)Sunday, May 5, 2024 at 00:35:42

Why is time 60 seconds? ›

Who decided on these time divisions? THE DIVISION of the hour into 60 minutes and of the minute into 60 seconds comes from the Babylonians who used a sexagesimal (counting in 60s) system for mathematics and astronomy. They derived their number system from the Sumerians who were using it as early as 3500 BC.

What can symbolize time? ›

Clocks are often used as symbols of time and mortality, and they have been featured in countless works of art and literature. In art, clocks have been used as symbols of the passage of time and the inevitability of death.

What are symbolic symbols of time? ›

Clocks are a symbolic representation of the passage of time. They are often used as a metaphor for the ticking of the human lifespan. Furthermore, clocks can be seen as a symbol of the cyclical nature of time, as they mechanically repeat the same sequence of actions over and over again.

What color symbolizes the past? ›

Black and white or sepia-toned photographs can be used to represent the past — or faded color-shifts for prints from the 1970s or 1980s.

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