TechJunkie is a BOX20 Media Company

Home PC Windows How to Enable the New Clock and Calendar Design in the Windows 10 Technical Preview

How to Enable the New Clock and Calendar Design in the Windows 10 Technical Preview

How to Enable the New Clock and Calendar Design in the Windows 10 Technical Preview

Microsoft is delivering a fresh interface throughout Windows 10. But with the operating system still in beta, some of these interface tweaks aren’t yet visible in the Technical Preview builds. One such tweak is the taskbar clock and calendar — the pop-up you see when clicking the time in the Desktop taskbar — which still looks exactly like it did in Windows 7 and Windows 8, and clashes with other design changes that Microsoft is implementing. Microsoft will of course continue to make changes as the Windows 10 Technical Preview goes on, but you can get a peek at the new taskbar clock and calendar design with a simple registry modification.
windows 10 default taskbar tray clock
With Windows 10 Technical Preview 2 or later, open the Windows Registry Editor by searching for regedit from the Start Menu. Then navigate to the following location:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionImmersiveShell

There, right-click on an empty space on the right side of the window and select New > DWORD (32-bit) Value. Name this DWORD UseWin32TrayClockExperience and assign it a value of 0.
windows 10 immersiveshell registry
There’s no need to reboot or log off; as soon as this registry modification is complete, click on your Desktop clock to see the new design for the calendar and time window.
windows 10 new taskbar tray clock
The new design is unsurprisingly incomplete: you can’t add additional clocks yet (clicking “Additional Clocks” opens the Alarm app, but any changes there don’t take effect in the taskbar clock window), and there seems to be no current implementation with the user’s default calendar app when navigating the calendar portion. But the overall design fits in much more appropriately with the rest of Windows 10, and the power users currently testing the operating system should be willing to accept the lost functionality for the time being.
If you don’t like the new design, or if you need the missing features like additional clocks back, just head back to the registry location mentioned above and delete the created DWORD. As soon as it’s gone, the default Windows 8-style taskbar clock will return.

Make OS X Yosemite Look Better on Non-Retina Displays by Disabling LCD Font Smoothing

Read Next 

7 thoughts on “How to Enable the New Clock and Calendar Design in the Windows 10 Technical Preview”

Rodeo36 says:
OOOOh my dear, we are clicking on the wrong place, do not click on the w10 clock anywhere, open Settings in W10! and in Date & Time on that page @ the right side of the page upper right part in red “Add clocks for different time zones” open that and make the changes you want and as it is indicated on the same page and: that’s it and do not enter to the regedit, and never unscrew the PC, or paint it dark green, just do the way as Microsoft bored geniuses invent in their heavenly workplaces in heavenly times…, LOL
Rodeo36 says:
you wrote: If you don’t like the new design, or if you need the missing features like additional clocks back, just head back to the registry location mentioned above and delete the created DWORD. As soon as it’s gone, the default Windows 8-style taskbar clock will return. but doing the same (the DWORD was in originally) deleting the line did not give back the clock with the multiple clocks in as in W10 previous version…it was enough a right click on the clock and I could do whatever I wanted now I can not even applying your suggestion
Ernie Jellinek says:
I’d like to suggest that any article like this that shows how to edit the registry to add a particular function should also include the hack to add the change to the registry so people wouldn’t have to edit the registry. It should also include the hack for disabling the function.
Kjetil says:
When will they add weeknumbers? Is that really so hard to have that as an option?
Jeffery Conklin says:
Note that the data value must be set to 1 from 0. the name of the DS Word file is “UseWin32TrayClockExperience” (without the parenthesis). Right click on the file name, select Modify, then change the value from 0 to 1 and click OK, then File and Exit. When you left click on the clock in the system tray, the clock/calendar dialog box will now pop up.
John says:
This did not work, I changed the value to 1 and it works now.
Tom says:
Thx John!!
harry says:
this does not work
TekRevue says:
Harry, as stated in the article title and instructions, this is for the Windows 10 Technical Preview (the beta pre-release versions of Windows 10). Now that Windows 10 has been finished and released, these instructions are no longer necessary, as the final build already contains the new clock and calendar design.
Kimmit Renken says:
So then the question is how do I get the clock and calendar to display on my taskbar? I have the Windows 10 upgrade on both my laptop and my desktop. The laptop has the clock and calendar displayed in the taskbar…the desktop does not, and I would like to get it back.
TekRevue says:
Hi Kimmit,
Great question. We just wrote a post on how to remove the clock from the Windows 10 taskbar. Check it out here and follow the instructions in the second section that discuss how to turn it back on.
I would imagine that this will solve your problem, and that this setting was inadvertently set on your Windows 10 desktop. If it doesn’t solve the issue, there may be a more serious problem with certain files becoming corrupted during the upgrade.
ConcernedCitizen2321 says:
Worked for me perfectly.
Frank Bilotta says:
This did not work for me either. After I installed Windows 10 everything seemed to be working fine, then some Windows updates happened and now my clock, calendar, network button (all the buttons on the task bar) won’t pop up to allow me to change them.
I’ve been looking on the internet and have tried several other fixes and none worked.
Wait, I saw the post below from some one who changed the value to 1 and it worked for them, I tried it and it worked.
Now, how do I get the network button and volume button to work?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Jim Tanous

Jan 28, 2015

676 Articles Published

More