A Nickel mod to show time while reading on Kobo ereaders.
This mod adds a clock to the header or footer while reading a book. It is an alternative to miniclock and NanoClock.
- Download the
NickelClock-<version>.zip
file from the latest release. Extract theKoboRoot.tgz
file from the downloaded file (note: Mac OS X may extract this by default on download). - Copy
KoboRoot.tgz
to the.kobo
directory on your Kobo, and disconnect it from your computer. The Kobo will reboot automatically.
NickelClock 0.2.0 used a different settings format. When upgrading, settings are automatically migrated.
The clock and battery may be positioned independently in one of four locations:
Left header, Right header, Left footer, Right footer
Positioning and other settings are saved in .adds/nickelclock/settings.ini
,
and the default settings file is as follows:
[General]
Margin=Auto
[Battery]
BatteryType=Level
Enabled=false
Placement=Header
Position=Right
LevelTemplate=%1%
[Clock]
Enabled=true
Placement=Header
Position=Right
The following settings may be set. Note that entries are case sensitive:
Setting | Values |
---|---|
Margin |
Auto , or any whole number greater than zero, up to a quarter of your screen width. |
Setting | Values |
---|---|
Placement |
Header , Footer |
Position |
Left , Right |
Enabled |
true , false |
Setting | Values |
---|---|
BatteryType |
Level , Icon , Both |
LevelTemplate |
Any string that contains %1 |
The battery icon is not compatible with dark mode, the icon is not inverted.
Setting both clock and battery level to the same placement and position is not supported, and the result will be neither showing.
No other customisation is available at this time.
If you have disabled the header and/or footer in the reading settings, the clock or battery may not show.
NickelClock should be compatible with any Kobo device running a recent 4.x firmware release. It has currently been tested to work on firmware 4.33.
To uninstall NickelClock, simply delete the uninstall
file from the
.adds/nickelclock
directory, then restart your Kobo.
NickelClock works in a fundamentally different way to MiniClock or NanoClock. They directly print to the screen wheras NickelClock creates a Widget that Kobo's software displays.
MiniClock and NanoClock are much more configurable than NickelClock is. If you want precise control over the positioning and appearance of your clock, NickelClock is probably not what you want to use.
MiniClock/NanoClock have known stability issues with newer devices, especially the Kobo Libra2. NickelClock should not have such stability issues.