Digital Clock
A clean digital clock for Notion with automatic timezone detection — embed and forget.
About this widget
The Olivtwig Digital Clock widget shows the current time, live, with the visitor's local timezone detected automatically. Embed the URL into a Notion page and the clock ticks forever — no signup, no extension, no install. The clock formats time using the visitor's locale (24-hour or 12-hour based on their system) so it always looks native to whoever is looking at the page. Designed to be the smallest possible time anchor for daily workspaces, meeting pages, and any Notion page where 'what time is it right now?' is part of the workflow.
Why a live clock inside Notion
Most operating systems already show a clock in the menu bar, but glancing up there breaks focus. A live clock embedded directly on the Notion page you're working on keeps the time inside your reading area — useful for meeting pages, time-boxed work sessions, and shared workspaces where multiple people need the same time reference. The clock has no setup: it reads the current time from the visitor's browser and renders it in their local format.
How timezone detection works
Every visitor's browser exposes its local timezone to the widget, so the time displayed always matches the device clock — no manual configuration, and no mismatched times across collaborators in different regions. The widget uses the browser's locale-aware time formatter, which means hour conventions (24-hour vs 12-hour with AM/PM) match the visitor's system settings automatically.
Where it earns its place
The clock pairs well with any time-conscious Notion workflow.
- Daily dashboard
- Pin it to the top of your daily start page so 'now' is always in the corner of your eye.
- Meeting page
- Useful at the top of meeting-notes templates so participants land on the right reference time.
- Time-boxing
- Pair with a Pomodoro widget for explicit start-time tracking during focus sessions.
- Shared workspace
- Drop into a team home page so everyone sees a consistent reference time when viewing the page.
Use cases
Daily dashboard
Pin to the top of your daily start page so 'now' stays in the corner of your eye.
Meeting notes
Embed at the top of meeting-notes templates as a clear local-time reference for attendees.
Time-boxing
Pair with a Pomodoro widget for explicit start-time tracking during focused work sessions.
Team home page
Drop into a shared workspace so each visitor lands on their own correctly-timezoned reference.
How to embed in Notion
- 01
Type /embed in Notion
Open any Notion page, type /embed, and select the Embed block from the menu.
- 02
Paste the widget URL
Copy the URL from any widget page and paste it into the embed dialog.
- 03
Widget appears instantly
The widget is now live in your Notion page. Resize it by dragging the edges.
Frequently asked questions
Is the Clock widget free?
Yes. Every Olivtwig widget — including the Clock — is free to use, with no signup or login required.
Does the clock detect my timezone automatically?
Yes. The widget reads the timezone from the visitor's browser, so each viewer sees their own local time without configuration.
Is the format 12-hour or 24-hour?
The clock uses the visitor's locale: Korean and most European visitors typically see 24-hour, US visitors typically see 12-hour with AM/PM. The system handles it automatically.
Does the time update live?
Yes — the displayed time updates every second so it stays accurate to the device clock.
Can I show multiple timezones at once?
Not in a single clock widget — each clock shows the visitor's local time. If you need a multi-timezone dashboard, embed multiple Clock widgets on the same page (each still shows the visitor's local time, since the clock is per-viewer).