Launched this week
Taskello

Taskello

See where your time actually goes automatically, as you work

10 followers

Taskello is a calm productivity tool for solo professionals who want to understand where their time actually goes. Tasks automatically track time as you work, so you can see today’s real workload, overdue time, and how accurate your plans really were — without manual timers, subscriptions, or feature overload. Built for freelancers, developers, and designers who care about focus, honesty, and clarity.
Taskello gallery image
Taskello gallery image
Taskello gallery image
Taskello gallery image
Taskello gallery image
Taskello gallery image
Taskello gallery image
Taskello gallery image
Taskello gallery image
Taskello gallery image
Taskello gallery image
Taskello gallery image
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Launch Team / Built With
Intercom
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What do you think? …

mohamed ehab
Maker
📌
👋 Hey Product Hunt! I built Taskello because I was tired of task managers that either: – track nothing about time – or overwhelm me with features I don’t need Taskello is built around one simple idea: your tasks should show you where your time actually goes. It focuses on: – Today’s total task time – Overdue time (so nothing silently piles up) – A reflection step when tasks are completed No subscriptions — just $25 lifetime, and you own it. Also got access to upcoming addons I’ve been using it daily myself, and it genuinely changed how I plan my days. Would love your feedback — especially from solo devs, freelancers, and designers 🙏
Nika

I saw something like this past weeks. Cannot remember the exact product. Does it summarise any suggestions on how to optimise time?

mohamed ehab

@busmark_w_nika 
Good question 🙂

Taskello doesn’t auto-summarise or tell you how to optimise your time.

What it does instead is make the gap between planned time vs actual time very visible (daily + over time), and shows patterns like overruns, unfinished tasks, and estimation accuracy.

Most users end up adjusting naturally once they can clearly see where time actually goes without tips, pressure, or “productivity advice”. It’s more reflection than optimisation.

mohamed ehab

One thing I’m especially curious about:

Do you usually estimate time before starting a task, or just track time after it’s done?

Taskello was built around that exact tension.