Hiten Shah

Timing 2 - Automatic time and productivity tracking for Mac.

Timing is an automatic time tracking app for Mac. Instead of making you do the work by starting/stopping Timers, Timing automatically tracks how much time you spend in each app, website and document. That way, you can later see exactly how productive you were and use the tracked time to bill clients.

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Heidi Helen Pilypas
OMG! I love @TimingApp. I've been using it since April last year. I am looking forward so much to trying the new version. Just got to figure out how to upgrade.
Daniel Alm
Heidi Helen Pilypas
@daniel_a_a Thank you. I was trying to use the chat feature on your website to find out but it got stuck on sending.
Heidi Helen Pilypas
@daniel_a_a P.S. Will it save over Timing 1 or be separate? I don't have the money to buy it now but I will when I can.
Daniel Alm
@heidi_helen you can keep both running at once - see https://timingapp.com/whats-new#faq :-)
Max Ott
I've been new to Timing and started using it in beta. To be honest, I'm not a big fan of time tracking and I don't have to bill clients, so I was quite skeptical what the value of such an app would be. So far it has given me an amazing visual overview of my workdays and patterns. It showed me when I'm most productive (and when not). I don't have to turn anything on, so I'm not missing any data. Lovin it so far and looking forward to integrations and sync 😇
Geoffrey Wiseman
I use timing in combination with toggl right now -- it hasn't become my primary time tracker, but it's still very useful to help when I fail to turn timers on (all the time). I'm a consultant, so time tracking is important to me. Timing 1 was already useful, but Timing 2 is vastly better in all the ways I care about. Definitely worth checking out. I recommend it. ;) As soon as I get back from lunch, I'm buying the upgrade. EDIT: Purchased.
Matthias Gansrigler
Awesome app!
Humberto Valle
great hunt @hnshah !
Jan Piotrowski
This looks so awesome. Problem: I'm on Windows and ChromeOS only. Are you planning on expanding to these platforms? If not, do you know someone who is working on similar software for these platforms?
Daniel Alm
@sujan Hi Jan! At the moment a Windows version is out of scope, but maybe later ;-) For Windows, you could use http://www.manictime.com and I'm sure there are Chrome tracking extensions as well.
Rodrigo Hillion
Hey lads! this is an app with super powers and lots of potential. I tested it for some days. What I felt was that it couldn't really achieve in me what I understood it was suppose to do. The app tracks everything, that's why is powerful, but I couldn't forget about the pain of logging time. I saw the app is tracking all of it for me, what I open, what files I was modifying and more, but is too messy to understand at first, is overwhelming, and it cause this sensation of "I really need to learn more stuff to track/read my time?". I noticed there is a course you offer in order to put the user in context, but I really didn't want to do it. Call me lazy, but I guess there is a lot (A LOT really) of other users just like me, that prefer to keep logging time the way they are already doing it instead of the possible pain and disappointment of learning and not getting what I was expecting. The main reason I downloaded it, is because what the app stands for: is painful to turn on and off the clock. I completely agree with that, logging time should be something automatic after little configuration. The app has potential because of it capacity of logging all of it. An ideal situation for me would be, if the user can setup a project (two or three steps) like, 1. project name, 2. URL (localhost or remote) where I am testing (could be Chrome, Firefox, Safari or... you know the one with E) and 3. softwares (IDE, Sketch, etc) I am using, with corresponding paths to related files with that project. So after that, if I touch a file in Webstorm inside that particular folder, if I refresh or navigate in chrome on that particular URL and if I open that Sketch file inside that particular folder, then, all of it should be tracked under MY-AWESOME-PROJECT-NAME. If Timing is already doing that, then the only thing left would be to simplify the onboarding process to something that will catch my attention from minute one to ten, the attention after realising: "Every time I touch this file it logs my time under this project!!". Just enough information to keep moving with what I need to do, instead of asking me to put names here, there, clicking here there and paying too much attention. So don't take me bad, my idea here is to give some insight on what I felt, after all, we are here to give our opinions =). Hoping to help you guys. Thanks!!
Daniel Alm
@rohillion hi Rodrigo! Thanks for the feedback. However, I felt making the onboarding even longer wouldn't be good either. Also - the onboarding essentially tells you how to do just this: drag the keyword (or domain) you need onto your project. Done. (And to create a rule, you option-drag.)
Matthew Brennan
The UI looks stunning!
Andrey Atapin
My favourite time tracking application. If you can measure a thing, you know how to optimize the thing. Thanks Timing2 for raising my productivity up.
L.
@daniel_a_a Hello Daniel! Do you have any updates on a Windows version? This app is too good to be mac only, ManicTime is not even close to Timing :(