Stanton

Flows · Time Tracker - Most time trackers are built for billing. Flows isn’t.

Time doesn’t stop when you finish a task. Neither does Flows. Tap a flow to start tracking. Tap another to switch. No projects, no tasks, no timesheets. Just a simple, visual picture of where your attention went. Built for people who want awareness, not surveillance.

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Stanton
Hi Product Hunt 👋 I’m Paul, creator of Flows. The idea came from a frustration I’ve had for years: most time trackers seem designed for invoices, utilisation reports, or productivity optimisation. I didn’t want another tool telling me to be more productive. I wanted a simple way to answer one question: “Where did my day actually go?” So I built Flows. The interaction is intentionally simple: • Tap a flow to start tracking • Tap another flow to switch, like a chess clock • No timers to manage • No tasks to maintain • No streaks to lose One feature I’m particularly proud of is Drifting. Most apps treat untracked time as failure. Flows treats it as reality. Some days are focused. Some days aren’t. Understanding that is more useful than pretending otherwise. Privacy was also important from day one. Your data stays yours. No ads. No selling behavioural data. I’d love to hear: • How do you currently track your time? • What have you tried that didn’t stick? • What would make a tool like this genuinely useful? Happy to answer questions throughout the day.
Farrukh Butt

The Drifting idea is a smart touch. Most time trackers make untracked time feel like failure, but real days are messy. This feels more useful for awareness than pressure.

Stanton

@farrukh_butt1 Thanks Farrukh. That’s exactly why Drifting exists. Time doesn’t stop just because we stop tracking a specific activity. Making that time visible has been far more useful for me than trying to force every minute into a category. The goal is awareness, not pressure. 🙌