日めくり風カレンダー・Page-a-day calendar Description
This is a simple information display board created for the purpose of utilizing the screens of old tablets and smartphones that have been retired.
This is a calendar with a screen layout that imitates the daily calendar that has been used in Japan for a long time.
The main information displayed on the screen is ``year and month of the Western calendar, Japanese era name, Japanese name of the month, date, day of the week, lunar calendar, Rokuyo, 24 solar terms, and phase of the moon.''
Swipe up on the date section to display the next day's information, and swipe down to display the previous day's information. Double tap to return to the current day.
When you touch the Japanese calendar part, the era name changes and the years are displayed in the order of Reiwa > Heisei > Showa > Taisho > Meiji.
The Japanese calendar, Rokuyo, and 24 solar terms are also accompanied by readings in Roman characters.
The calendar contents are stored up to the year 2033, but on older devices, the device may freeze for 15 to 60 seconds on the title screen when first started due to internal data expansion.
This is a simple information display board created to make use of retired old tablets and smartphones.
It is a calendar designed with a screen layout reminiscent of the traditional Japanese "page-a-day" calendar, which has been widely cherished in Japan. The main information displayed on the screen includes "Gregorian year and month, Japanese era name, Japanese month name, date, day of the week, lunar calendar, six-day cycle, twenty-four solar terms, and moon age."
Swipe up on the date section to see information for the next day, swipe down for the previous day. Double-tap to return to today's information.
Touch the Japanese era part to switch eras, and the years will be displayed in the order of Reiwa > Heisei > Showa > Taisho > Meiji.
The Japanese era, six-day cycle, and twenty-four solar terms include Romanized readings.
While the calendar's content is built-in for up to the year 2033, on older devices, the device may freeze for about 15 to 60 seconds during the initial startup at the title screen due to the internal data expansion process.
This is a calendar with a screen layout that imitates the daily calendar that has been used in Japan for a long time.
The main information displayed on the screen is ``year and month of the Western calendar, Japanese era name, Japanese name of the month, date, day of the week, lunar calendar, Rokuyo, 24 solar terms, and phase of the moon.''
Swipe up on the date section to display the next day's information, and swipe down to display the previous day's information. Double tap to return to the current day.
When you touch the Japanese calendar part, the era name changes and the years are displayed in the order of Reiwa > Heisei > Showa > Taisho > Meiji.
The Japanese calendar, Rokuyo, and 24 solar terms are also accompanied by readings in Roman characters.
The calendar contents are stored up to the year 2033, but on older devices, the device may freeze for 15 to 60 seconds on the title screen when first started due to internal data expansion.
This is a simple information display board created to make use of retired old tablets and smartphones.
It is a calendar designed with a screen layout reminiscent of the traditional Japanese "page-a-day" calendar, which has been widely cherished in Japan. The main information displayed on the screen includes "Gregorian year and month, Japanese era name, Japanese month name, date, day of the week, lunar calendar, six-day cycle, twenty-four solar terms, and moon age."
Swipe up on the date section to see information for the next day, swipe down for the previous day. Double-tap to return to today's information.
Touch the Japanese era part to switch eras, and the years will be displayed in the order of Reiwa > Heisei > Showa > Taisho > Meiji.
The Japanese era, six-day cycle, and twenty-four solar terms include Romanized readings.
While the calendar's content is built-in for up to the year 2033, on older devices, the device may freeze for about 15 to 60 seconds during the initial startup at the title screen due to the internal data expansion process.
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