Windows: If you're sporting an HTC phone with the HTC user interface you may have grown fond of the combination clock and weather forecasting widget. HTC Home ports the HTC interface from your phone to your Windows desktop, complete with animations.
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HTC Home is a port of the popular weather/clock widget from the HTC Sense UI interface found on Android phonesâand related to similar HTC UIs found on other smart phones. You can resize the widget, tuck it in the taskbar, toggle the animations on and off, and easily switch which locale the forecast is reporting.
HTC Home is Windows Vista/7 only and requires Microsoft .NET 4.0. Have a favorite weather app or widget? Let's hear about it in the comments.
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HTC Home 2.0 [via Addictive Tips]
Clock widgets are some of the most popular widgets on Android. It really puts a home screen together. Plus, itâs easier to see than the tiny time placement on the status bar. The most popular include a clock widget with weather because it adds another level to its functionality. There are plenty of excellent options to choose from. Of course, there are also a ton of old clock widgets that donât work great anymore, so we filtered those out for the most part. Itâs okay, we have your back. Here are the best clock widgets and weather clock widgets for your home screen! 15 best weather apps and weather widgets for Android! (Updated 2019)15 best Android Widgets for your home screen!1Weather![]()
1Weather is a solid weather app. It has a lot of desirable features, including temperature, real feel, a 10-day forecast, a 12-week forecast (mostly accurate), a radar, and plenty of other stuff. It also has some of the best weather widgets for mobile. That includes a weather clock widget. It's clean, it fits across the top of a home screen with no problems. It's lightly customizable as well. You can change the text color, the background opacity, and it comes with a live weather theme. We didn't like the live weather theme so much, but the rest of the customization helps it fit into almost any home screen theme you have.
Chronus
Chronus is an above average widget app. It does all kinds of widgets. That includes stuff for weather, clock, calendar, Gmail, missed calls, text messages, and all kinds of other stuff. It even includes DashClock support if you need that. The widgets are simple, but customizable and they do the job admirably. They should fit with almost any theme with a little tweaking. There are a few complaints in the Google Play reviews, but most of them are relatively minor. You can get some of the features for free. There are in-app purchases for the premium stuff, but it's not that much.
Circle Clock
Circle Clock is a simple, but effective clock widget app. It puts a circle widget on the home screen with the time and date. The widget is customizable and that includes colors, fonts, 12/24 hour clock support, and some animation settings. The animations show the seconds as progress bars around the outside of the clock. They can be disabled if you want less battery drain. That's about it for this one, really. It's free, it's simple, and it looks pretty decent on most home screen themes. Round Clock Widget is another app that does basically the same thing in case this one doesn't work for you.
Digital Clock Widget Xperia
Digital Clock Widget Xperia is a lot like the Sony Xperia's stock clock widget. Thankfully, this one works for almost all devices. It includes several widget sizes (2x1, 4x2, 4x1, and 2x2) and they are all re-sizable. Additionally, you can adjust the font size, color, time and date format, transparency, and more. The premium version adds some additional features as well. There is an optional weather element. That makes this a decent weather clock widget as long as you need something simple. It's cheap, effective, and it looks nice.
HD Widgets
HD Widgets received its first update in a long time in September 2018 and that's good enough to put it back on the list for now. HD Widgets is one of the older clock widgets on Android. You can also add stuff like weather data, toggles, date, and other such things. There are a variety of base layouts and you customize each one with the colors you want. There are also two add-ons with additional base layouts and color options. It's a little old school, but it functions just fine as a clock widget. It is a premium app with no demo version, so do check it out before the refund time.
15 best Android apps of 2019! (Updated July 2019)10 best Android themes, theming apps, and customizations!KWGT and KLWP
KWGT and KLWP are two hardcore customization apps. KWGT makes custom widgets and KLWP makes custom live wallpapers. Both can put clocks on your home screen. KWGT is the best to try first. You can create your custom widget with basically whatever info you like in whatever format you want. It also includes weather info in case you want that. KLWP isn't a widget app. However, you can create live wallpapers with clocks on them and achieve the same effect. Both apps have free versions with premium versions for $4.49 each. Zooper Widget and UCCW are also excellent custom widget apps.
Sense Flip Clock
HTC had one of the most iconic clock widgets in Android's early days. The flip clock widget is often imitated in other apps including this one. It comes with three widget sizes (4x1, 4x2, and 5x2). It also features an actual clock flip clock animation, support for weather, customization options, custom widget click actions, and more. HTC's clock is gone, but frankly this one might be better anyway. It's also entirely free with advertising. The good news is that the advertising does not show up in your actual widget, just the app that configures it.
Weather and Clock Widget
Weather and Clock Widget is an unimaginative, but descriptive name. This app has a bunch of weather clock widgets. Some of the features include a 10-day forecast, current temperature, hourly temperature, automatic or manual location, themes, Wear OS support, and more. The widgets come in a variety of sizes and tend to look clean. They are customizable with themes and minor tweaks. You should be able to find a style you like. The free version has ads and the pro version does not. Otherwise, they operate more or less the same.
Weather Underground
Weather Underground is one of the best weather apps available. Of course, it comes with some decent widgets also. The app features hyper-local weather (in select areas), forecasts, air quality measurements, UV measurements, and more. The $1.99 per year subscription removes ads and it's one of the most reasonable subscriptions we've ever seen. The widgets are a little dry, but work quite well. They are lightly customizable and focus more on weather than the clock. It's nice because most do it the other way around.
OEM Clock Widgets
OEM clock widgets aren't a horrible way to go. They come with the device already. Thus, no extra space is needed to download additional apps. On most, the widget selections include a clock widget as well as a weather clock widget. Some OEMs, like Samsung, source their weather information from sources like AccuWeather. Thus, you can get forecasts without downloading official apps. The widgets aren't overly customizable (usually), but they are minimal, clean, and simple. They come on your phone and you can't get rid of them. Thus, we suggest trying them just to see if it's what you like. Just long press the home screen, tap widget, and go from there.
Bonus: Beautiful Widgets
Beautiful Widgets was one of the best and most popular clock widgets on Android. It has a metric ton of themes, customizations, and more. The themes range from simple re-skins to complex stuff like binary clocks if you're into that kind of thing. You can add stuff like the weather, toggles, alarm time, date, and other information to the widget as well. Unfortunately, the app hasn't been updated since 2016. We're relatively certain it's an abandoned project. However, it still works well in our testing, especially on devices with older versions of Android. Feel free to give it a try, but with caution. Bugs aren't going to get fixed with this one.
10 best clock apps and digital clock apps for Android10 best alarm clock apps for Android
If we missed any great clock widgets or weather clock widgets for Android, tell us about them in the comments! You can also click here to check out our latest Android app and game lists!
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A full featured, fully customizable digital clock and weather forecast widget
The widget features the following: - 3 widget sizes, 4x1, 4x2 and 5x2 - Flip animation - Several widget skins to choose from - Different weather icon skins - Different fonts for the time - Display the next alarm and week number on the widget (optional) - Several widget hotspots (most of them can be user defined to launch specific applications) - Automatic location (from cell/wifi or GPS) or manual - Automatic weather update interval (15 min, 30 min, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8 hours) or manual - Hour change notification option - Detailed current weather forecast display that includes the following: - Local time (for current location) - Sunrise and sunset time for current location - Humidity, pressure, chance of rain, dew point, visibility, UV index and wind conditions - Current condition, temperature, low and high temperatures - Last weather update time - Background according to the weather condition and day/night - Optional display of the current moon phase - 24 hourly weather forecast - 24 hourly wind forecast - 7 day future forecast - Future forecast details (sunrise, sunset, moon phase, wind, humidity and chance of rain - World weather: Choose to display weather information for any number of different locations worldwide - The application is localized in more than 40 languages Blog: http://droid27.blogspot.com/ F.A.Q.: http://droid27.blogspot.com/p/faq.html Website: http://www.machapp.net Email us if you have any problems or suggestions. We are happy to help!
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HTC Sense is a software suite developed by HTC, used primarily on the company's Android-based devices. Serving as a successor to HTC's TouchFLO 3D software for Windows Mobile, Sense modifies many aspects of the Android user experience, incorporating additional features (such as an altered home screen and keyboard), additional widgets, re-designed applications, and additional HTC-developed applications. The first device with Sense, the HTC Hero, was released in 2009.[1] The HD2 running Windows Mobile 6.5, released later the same year, included Sense.[2] Following the release of the Hero, all future Android devices by HTC were shipped with Sense, except for the Nexus One, the T-Mobile G2, the HTC First, the Google Pixel and Pixel 2, and the Nexus 9 which used a stock version of Android.[3] Also some HTC smartphones that are using MediaTek processors come without HTC Sense.
At the Mobile World Congress 2010, HTC debuted their new updated HTC Sense UI on the HTC Desire and HTC Legend, with an upgrade available for the Hero and Magic. The new version was based upon Android 2.1 and featured interface features such as the Friend Stream widget, which aggregated Twitter, Facebook and Flickr information and Leap, which allows access to all home screens at once.[4]
When the HTC Sensation was released, it featured HTC Sense 3.0, which added interface elements, including an updated lock screen that allows applications to be pinned directly to it for easier access. The HTC EVO 3D also features Sense 3.0.
Two versions of Sense were developed for Android 4.0. Sense 4.0, included on HTC's new devices beginning in 2012 (such as the HTC One X), was designed to provide a refreshed and more minimalist look closer to stock Android than previous versions, while integrating features provided by Android 4.0. Sense 3.6, which was distributed through updates to older HTC phones, was designed to maintain a closer resemblance to previous versions of Sense on Android 2.3.[5]
Versions[edit]HTC Sense (2009)[edit]
The original version of Sense was first introduced by the HTC Hero.
Espresso (2010)[edit]
Espresso was the codename for the version of Sense running atop T-MobilemyTouch devices. It debuted on the T-Mobile myTouch 3G (HTC Espresso) and the T-Mobile myTouch 4G (HTC Glacier). It features all of the widgets and apps of regular Sense, but the color of apps and certain interface elements are blue instead of green. 'Pushed in' apps appear on the home screen.
Sense 1.9(2010)[edit]
Sense 4.1 debuted on the HTC Desire and HTC Legend and provided upgrades for the HTC Hero and HTC Magic. It introduced FriendStream and the Leap feature similar to macOS's Mission Control.
Sense 3.0 (2011)[edit]
Sense 3.0 debuted on the HTC Sensation. This version introduced HTC Watch, a movie streaming service, and updated the lockscreen with app shortcuts for easier access. Additional lockscreen styles included widgets that display content such as weather and photos. It also features 3D homescreen transition effects when swiping among homescreens.
Sense 3.6 (2012)[edit]
Legacy HTC devices that received updates to Android 4.0 use Sense 3.6; an update integrating select features from Sense 4 (such as the updated home screen), but visual and design elements from Sense 3.5.[5][6]
Sense 4.0 (2012)[edit]
Sense 4.0 was first introduced by the HTC One series of devices with Android 4.0 unveiled in 2012; the One X, One S, and One V. Many aspects of the Sense interface were modified to closer resemble the standard Android interface (such as its home screen, which now uses a dock of shortcuts instead of the fixed 'All Apps', 'Phone', and 'Personalize' buttons of previous versions), a new application switcher using cards, updated stock apps, and Beats Audio support.[7][8]
Sense 4.1 (2012)[edit]
Sense 4.1 was a minor update to the original Sense 4.0. It ran on top of Android 4.0.4 as opposed to Android 4.0.3, and included many bug fixes and optimizations. The only device of the original HTC One series not to receive this update was the HTC One V.
Sense 4.5 or 4+ (2012)[edit]
Announced in 2012 for the HTC One X+, updates with Sense 4+ was also released with Android 4.1.2 updates for the One X, One S, Evo 4G LTE, One SV LTE / 3G and Desire X. Total war warhammer empire army builds.
Sense 5 (2013)[edit]
Announced in April 2013 for the 2013 HTC One; it features a more minimalistic design and a new scrolling news aggregator on the home screen known as 'BlinkFeed', which displays a scrolling grid of news headlines and social network content. By default, Sense 5 uses three home screen pages: two with the traditional grid for apps and widgets (as with previous devices, but using a grid with fewer spaces for apps by default), and the default screen with a redesigned clock and BlinkFeed, although more pages can still be added.[9] Sense 5.0 was not only going to be exclusive to the HTC One; on February 28, 2013, HTC announced that it would provide updates for the Butterfly, One S (later discontinued), and the One X/X+ to Sense 5.0 in the coming months.[10]
Htc Clock WidgetSense 5.5 (2013)[edit]
Announced in September 2013 for the HTC One Max; it adds RSS and Google+ support to BlinkFeed, allows users to disable BlinkFeed entirely, adds a tool for making animated GIFs, and additional Highlights themes.[11][12]
Sense 6.0 (2014)[edit]
Sense 6.0, nicknamed 'Sixth Sense', was announced alongside the 2014 HTC One (M8) on March 25, 2014. Based on Android 4.4 'KitKat', it is similar to Sense 5, but offers new customization options (such as color themes and new font choices), increased use of transparency effects (particularly on the home screen, and on Sense 6.0 devices which use on-screen buttons), and updates to some of its included apps. BlinkFeed, Gallery, TV, and Zoe are now updated independently of Sense through Google Play Store.[13]
The HTC One (2013), One Mini and One Max are updated to 6.0 via a software update.[14]
Sense 7.0 (2015)[edit]
Sense 7.0 was announced at the Mobile World Congress on March 1, 2015 alongside the HTC One M9. It is based on Android 5.0 'Lollipop', and is largely the same as Sense 6.0 as far as the default user interface is concerned, save for a few tweaked icons and a new weather clock widget. Perhaps the most notable new feature is the new user interface theming app (simply called 'Themes'), which allows users to alter the color schemes, icons, sounds, and fonts throughout the operating system. Users can either create their own themes from scratch or download pre-made ones created by HTC or fellow users. Another major new feature is the ability to customize the navigation buttons across the bottom of the display; users can now change their order and add a fourth button, such as a power button or one that hides the navigation bar altogether.[15]
Advertisements in Blinkfeed[edit]
HTC confirmed that advertisements will be displayed in the Blinkfeed. However, HTC has given the option for the user to opt-out from receiving these advertisements.[16][17] In August 2015, owners of HTC M8 and M9 in the United States reported in reddit that they have received a push-notification promoting the upcoming Fantastic Four movie theme.[18][19]
HTC Sense 10 (2018)[edit]
The HTC U12+ ships with Android 8.0 Oreo with an overlay of HTC Sense UI 10.0. It features Project Treble, which allows for faster updates after new versions of Android appear. The Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant and HTC Sense Companion virtual assistants come pre-installed.[c][1]
List of devices with HTC Sense[edit]Sense 10.0[edit]Sense 9.0[edit]
Sense 8.0[edit]Sense 7.0[edit]
Sense 6.1[edit]Sense 6.0[edit]
Sense 5.5[edit]
Sense 5.0[edit]
Sense 4+[edit]
Sense 4.1[edit]
Sense 4.0[edit]
Sense 3.6[edit]
Sense 3.6 is exclusively obtained through Android 4.0 updates for existing devices.
Nissan speaker wire red and white. Then you want to make sure that those eight wires are of the same gauge, which rules out the plug on the right in the foreground, which leaves only the plug in the background. Then this on another forumRadio 12v yellow/green + radio harnessRadio Ground (chassis)Radio Ignition purple + radio harnessRadio Illumination red/blue + radio harnessFactory Amp Turn-on green/white + radio harnessPower Antenna green + radio harnessLF Speaker +/- blue/white - blue/red +,- radio harness or amp under rear deckRF Speaker +/- white/black - blue/black +,- radio harness or amp under rear deckLR Speaker +/- green/yellow - black/yellow +,- radio harness or amp under rear deckRR Speaker +/- blue - red +,- radio harness or amp under rear deck. I mean it has been ages since I had the HU wiring out but looking at the pic in the OP, you can eliminate a lot already.Since you are looking for speaker wires, it's logical to look for a plug that has at least eight wires coming out of it, which counts out the plug on the left of the pic.
Sense 3.5[edit]
Sense 2.0 / 2.1[edit]
Sense 1.0[edit]
Original Sense[edit]
Espresso Sense[edit]
HTC devices without Sense[edit]
Most HTC devices released since the introduction of Sense incorporate it, but several do not, including the Nexus One (released as the first device in the Nexus series), the T-Mobile G2 (a variation of the HTC Desire Z with stock Android), the HTC First (after Facebook Home is disabled), and a special edition HTC One released on Google Play in June 2013.[3][22] In March 2014 HTC announced the Desire 310 running Android 4.2.2 with the addition of Blinkfeed and Video Highlights.[23] Like predecessor the HTC One (M8) also got a Google Play Edition, running Android 4.4.2. The Nexus 9 Tablet was unveiled by Google on October 15, 2014 running Android 5.0.
Clock Widgets FreeSee also[edit]Best Clock WidgetReferences[edit]
External links[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=HTC_Sense&oldid=897175872'
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