Time.is displays exact, official atomic clock time for any time zone (more than 7 million locations) in 51 languages.
Popular campgrounds open for reservations months in advance—and sell out in minutes. But many of those campsite reservations get canceled. So, we built an app that scans sold-out parks for new availabilities and sends notifications about them. Since we did, we’ve helped campers all over North America find campsites that might have otherwise gone unused.
To create a scan, visit https://campnab.com and search for the place you want to camp. You then note your arrival date, length of stay, and how you want to pay. Once you’re done, Campnab scans that park for an opening that matches your needs. If it spots one, it notifies you with a text message.
You can also find us on:
Facebook: https://facebook.com/campnab
Instagram: https://instagram.com/campnab
Twitter: https://twitter.com/campnab
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/campnab
No features have been listed yet.
No Time.is videos yet. You could help us improve this page by suggesting one.
Campnab's answer:
Campnab scans sold-out state, provincial, national, and some county parks for cancelled campsite reservations and permits. When it spots an opening that matches your requirements, it sends a text message to you about the new availability.
Campnab's answer:
We monitor parks throughout the US and Canada—and can check for backcountry availabilities in a number of these parks. Using Campnab is super-easy as we’ve put so much effort into making the interface clean and intuitive. Plus, it has all kinds of useful features (for example: the ability to scan only for specific campsites). Meanwhile, if you ever run into an issue, one of us will help resolve it one-on-one. Members tend to be pleased that a real human is ready to lend a hand when needed.
Campnab's answer:
A lot of seasonal campers use Campnab throughout the spring, summer, and early fall. That said, we also do see a number of full-time RVers sign up for annual plans, as they need to be able to find campsite reservations year-round. We also find that some fair-weather campers use our pay-per-use scans once or twice a year.
Campnab's answer:
Eric and Kim bought a campervan, but couldn’t find a place to camp as every park was sold-out. This led Kim to spend hours hitting Refresh on the parks’ booking site in hopes of finding an availability. Eric figured he could automate the process to save Kim some time—and realized that others might also like this sort of service. So, he and his friend (also named Eric) released the product publicly. Since then, Campnab has become our full-time job, as we work to keep the system running well, add new features, and introduce scanning for additional regions.
We have been using Campnab for the most popular camping destinations around the country and have had 100% success in finding not only a campsite, but the specific waterfront campsites we always seek out. I highly recommend this campsite service to all of our friends and family, i promise you will not be disappointed! We have used this service at least 15 different times in the past few years and are more than satisfied.
I've used Campnab twice and was able to secure great campsites in my desired location both times. Both were for very busy weekends and I wouldn't have been able to snag a campsite otherwise. Love this service so much!
I recommend this app to anyone that likes camping and will definitely use it in the future. I was interested in camping in Canyonlands National Park, UT, but it was solid booked at least 6 months in advance. Though a bit skeptical at the beginning, I tried Campnab and now I have a reservation! The setup, login, setting up alarms in Campnab was very easy and straightforward. And a few weeks later I got a message about a cancellation. Good idea and very good app!
Based on our record, Time.is seems to be a lot more popular than Campnab. While we know about 229 links to Time.is, we've tracked only 15 mentions of Campnab. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I experience time drift with devices not connected to NTP like cheap stopwatch/microwave clock/etc, but my all my devices connected to NTP stay synced on their own. For example: - my Windows time settings says: "Last successful time synchronization: 3/7/2024..." (This ~41 hours ago and not manually triggered.) - https://time.is/: "Your clock is 0.4 seconds ahead." I'm a little surprised there is a 0.4 second... - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
It's my first quartz watch and I love it to bits! Made me realize that the accuracy of a quartz movement is no joke. I knew nothing much about watches until I started this hobby back in September, and I've still got lots to learn! But from the little I've learned so far, lots of videos say how accurate quartz is, but I didn't realize how accurate it was until I was cleaning some of my mechanical watches. Seikos, a... Source: 7 months ago
Hi all! Need advice to buy a new trail bike 140 fr/140 back, under 2500 $. On all I need an XL size as I'm 1.96cm and 97kg. Mostly I will do soft trails and maybe in 1 or 2 years after I will progress some harder ones.Maybe is better to buy a cheap one then upgrade over time.is is really that good the fork on the h10 Fox 34 Float Performance 140 3-Position vs the h30 Marzocchi Bomber Z2 140 ? Source: 8 months ago
Was wondering, because I put my mechanical watch and digital correct to the second via time.is , how people years ago had to correct time differences? Source: 9 months ago
I just tested it against https://time.is on my cell phone (using wifi calling because network strength is abysmal where I live). I don't have a precise measurement but it was imperceptibly close, within 100ms probably. Certainly close enough to set a clock for non critical purposes. - Source: Hacker News / 9 months ago
Campnab is a must have for the RVers/campsers I know. https://campnab.com/. - Source: Hacker News / about 1 year ago
We use an app called CampNab. There's a monthly fee but we've used it the past few years with a lot of success. Basically alerts you when a site opens up (cancelled reservations). Source: about 1 year ago
There is also a cool website you can pay for that will notify you. https://campnab.com/. Source: about 1 year ago
There's this amazing website called Campnab that lets you, for individual extra fees (ranging from like $5 to $25 or so) let's you get email or text updates when sites from certain campgrounds become available. That site saved me a couple summers ago and let me camp in the best spots in Yellowstone, glacier, and Teton. Highly recommend using. Source: about 1 year ago
Some people I know use CampNab and have had success with it. It's a paid service that notifies you via text when there's a cancellation at a park you're interested in. Source: about 1 year ago
timeanddate.com - Free Clock for your website or blog!
Hipcamp - Book unique camping experiences on over 300,000 campsites, cabins, RV parks, public parks and more.
World Time Buddy - Effortless time conversion and world time.
Campflare - Get notified when there are campsites open at your favorite campground. Its free.
Every Time Zone - Online tool for keeping up with times around the world.
UpCamp - Book the dates you want at the best campgrounds