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Good Lock’s ClockFace module now offers more customization

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Last updated: March 25th, 2024 at 11:52 UTC+01:00

Samsung has released an update to ClockFace, a module for Good Lock that gives you additional options to customize clock face for the lock screen and always-on display over what Android and One UI offer.  The update changes the app’s version to 3.1.7 and according to the changelog, it brings three features for phones/tablets running on One UI 6.1 and one improvement for devices running on One UI 6.0.

Let’s start with the three features for phones/tablets running on One UI 6.1. First, the update offers new font options for the clock face. Second, it adds a new weather item. Third, it allows you to add frames to images and GIFs. With the three new options, you can personalize the clock face in an even finer way than before.

Samsung ClockFace Version 3.1.7 Update Changelog

As for the one change for One UI 6.0, Samsung says that now when you open ClockFace on devices that don’t support clock style for always-on display, the app will show only the option to customize clock faces for the lock screen. Up until now, it used to show the option to customize clock faces for AOD as well, an option that couldn’t do anything.

We have received the latest update for ClockFace on our Galaxy S23 and Galaxy S24+ in India. So, it looks like the company has made the new version of the app available globally. To get the update, go to Galaxy Store » Menu » Updates. Recently, Samsung also updated Good Lock’s two more modules, Multistar and Wonderland.

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Computers

A Roku Terms of Service Update Locks Up Your TV Until You Agree

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Roku customers are threatening to stop using, or to even dispose of, their low-priced TVs and streaming gadgets after the company appears to be locking devices for people who don’t conform to the recently updated terms of service.

This month, users on Roku’s support forums reported suddenly seeing a message when turning on their Roku TV or streaming device reading: “We’ve made an important update: We’ve updated our Dispute Resolution Terms. Select ‘Agree’ to agree to these updated Terms and to continue enjoying our products and services. Press * to view these updated Terms.” A large button reading “Agree” follows. The pop-up doesn’t offer a way to disagree, and users are unable to use their device unless they hit agree.

Customers have left pages of complaints on Roku’s forum. One user going by “rickstanford” said they were “FURIOUS!!!!” and expressed interest in sending their reported six Roku devices back to the company since “apparently I don’t own them despite spending hundreds of dollars on them.”

Another user going by Formercustomer, who, I suspect, is aptly named, wrote:

So, you buy a product, and you use it. And they want to change the terms limiting your rights, and they basically brick the device … if you don’t accept their new terms. … I hope they get their comeuppance here, as this is disgraceful.

Roku has further aggravated customers who have found that disagreeing to its updated terms is harder than necessary. Roku is willing to accept agreement to its terms with a single button press, but to opt out, users must jump through hoops that include finding that old book of stamps.

To opt out of Roku’s ToS update, which primarily changes the “Dispute Resolution Terms,” users must send a letter to Roku’s general counsel in California mentioning: “the name of each person opting out and contact information for each such person, the specific product models, software, or services used that are at issue, the email address that you used to set up your Roku account (if you have one), and, if applicable, a copy of your purchase receipt.” Roku required all this to opt out of its terms previously, as well.

But the new update means that while users read this information and have their letter delivered, they’re unable to use products they already paid for and used, in some cases for years, under different “dispute resolution terms.”

“I can’t watch my TV because I don’t agree to the Dispute Resolution Terms. Please help,” a user going by Campbell220 wrote on Roku’s support forum.

Based on the ToS’s wording, users could technically choose to agree to the ToS on their device and then write a letter saying they’d like to opt out. But opting into an agreement only to use a device under terms you don’t agree with is counterintuitive.

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