I’ve never been a fan of the default screen savers that come included with new computers. Photos of generic beach scenes and flowers bore me. I usually scour the web for something that will set my machine apart from the rest and make my friends glance over at my monitor when it turns on to protect my screen from “ghost images” caused by phosphor burn-in.
For the past few months I’ve been running Digg Labs Swarm screen saver on my iMac, but just made the switch to Simon Hey’s Word Clock. Word Clock is an easy to install typographic screensaver for Mac OS X that will transform your machine typical to sleek. ”It displays a fixed list of all numbers and words sufficient to express any possible date and time as a sentence. Word Clock displays time by highlighting appropriate words as each second passes.”
The screensaver has a few nifty options that allow you to control the colors, typography, position of the text. You can position and resize the text however you like and can have it displayed in any of the 31 included languages. The ability to change typeface, leading, kerning, hyphenation and alignment is what truly makes this the ultimate typography nerd’s dream screensaver.
If you need some typographic inspiration, checkout some of the photos below or checkout the World Clock Flickr group.

Simon Hey’s also offers a Rotary Clock screensaver on their website, which is also very nice.
Tags: analog, binary, clock, colors, digital, screen savers, screen-saver, screensaver, simon heys, time, typography, world clock



















3 Comments
Yo thats pretty ill. I use to run The Matrix on all my monitors. At one point I had an eight way RGB splitter and something like 11 CRTs going. Man it use to get hot in there.
Jim Bastard, that sounds insane. You must be lying?
No way mang. I had two PCI video cards and one dual headed AGP card.
1 CRT on each PCI card = 2 Monitors
1 AGP out to 8 way splitter = 8 Monitors
1 AGP out to 21′ Crt = 1 Crt
Add them up! You get some toasty shit. I still have the 8 way RGB splitter somewhere in the basement but I’ve gotten rid most of the monitors.
That’s nothing, you should have seen the MONSTER setup I use to have in my Jeep Cherokee. Two Community SL-57 club speakers laying flat and a tower PC under the passenger seat.