Watson
org-journal
Watson | org-journal | |
---|---|---|
7 | 12 | |
2,391 | 1,215 | |
0.6% | - | |
0.0 | 7.3 | |
11 months ago | 3 months ago | |
Python | Emacs Lisp | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Watson
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Ask HN: What are good self hosted time tracking software for consultants?
I like Watson https://github.com/TailorDev/Watson and it used to have a web backend (crick) but that seems to be abandoned.
- Simple personal time tracker recommendation required
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How to launch a termux script from android watch?
For my particular use case, I use a cli timetracker called watson, code here:https://github.com/TailorDev/Watson
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Is there a proper quantified self time tracking app that has a great ecosystem and isn’t focused on team and businesses? (I’m using Toggl at the moment but it’s really not ideal for tracking everything you do)
If you're a huge dork like me you could use watson, which I use for contract work. Say I'm about to start working on ticket XE-506 for Acme corp. When I start I run watson start Acme +XE-507, which assigns that task to Acme and tags it with XE-507 (multiple tags per entry supported too). At the end of the week, I run watson aggregate, which separates the logs into an aggregate of how much time I spent on what each day (helps if I leave a ticket during a day and come back to it).
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Work Time Management software
I've used Watson for the past two years, and find it works well.
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timetrace: A simple CLI for tracking your working time
Nice. Take a look at Watson for another time tracking implementation.
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pali - a simple script to keep track of time working
hey! before you invest too much time into this, consider looking at: https://github.com/TailorDev/Watson
org-journal
- Ask HN: What are good self hosted time tracking software for consultants?
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Ask HN: How you maintain your daily log?
I use org-mode with org-journal https://github.com/bastibe/org-journal
What's nice about this workflow is when I create TODO items and don't finish them for a day it transfers over to the next day.
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Your tips for time recording in emacs?
Sounds like org-mode is what you need, particularly clocking like was mentioned in another comment. However your workflow requires lots of customization. Ultimately you need to take a deeper dive into org-mode and what it can do(and how), along with org-clock-convenience with maybe org-journal. Your starting point should always be agenda, not the .org file itself.
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Do you guys write on a notebook or have a digital file for notes?
As mentioned elsewhere, I too do a mix (happy to talk fountain pens and paper if you’d like). But for digital, Emacs is the supreme solution. It has tools like Org-roam for Zettlekasten-style notes, Org-journal for a developers journal, Org-babel for literate (or Jupyter-style) explorations. Nothing else comes close. Oh, and the “E” stands for extensible, so if it doesn’t do what you need, you can make it yourself.
- How do you store your notes?
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Double Question regarding Capture Templates and Archiving
For the second question, 1. try package like org-reverse-datetree and org-journal which can custom data format and level. 2. use file+function in capture template to find the right location in the file. 3. make the function in 2 respect you extend-day-until.
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Creating a daily document in orgmode
org-journal seems to fit your description pretty well. I have been using it for years.
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Keeping a Lab Notebook [pdf]
- type my timestamped notes
I can do this from any buffer in Emacs, so it's really convenient to stop in the middle of something, jot down a note, and then go right back to what I was doing. I develop iOS/macOS software right now, so the switch to Emacs from Xcode is a little more friction than I used to have, but it's so useful I don't mind it at all.
I have a weekly journal in a directory for the year, titled week number-month-day that started that week (this week's is `34_08-23`)
[0]https://github.com/bastibe/org-journal
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Org Roam: The Best Way to Keep a Journal in Emacs
bastibe/org-journal is already a feature full extension to Org for keeping a journal. And actively maintained by Bastian and Christian.
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Show HN: Note, my simple command line note taking app
I'm interested in using org-journal, a minor mode for Emacs org-mode, which supports collapsing. https://github.com/bastibe/org-journal
* Tuesday, 06/04/13
What are some alternatives?
timetracker - Basic Time tracker built with Python. Track what applications you spend your most time on.
awesome-reMarkable - A curated list of projects related to the reMarkable tablet
Leantime - Leantime is a goals focused project management system for non-project managers. Building with ADHD, Autism, and dyslexia in mind.
fsnotes - Notes manager for macOS/iOS
server - self-hosted tag-based time tracking
.doom.d - Private DOOM Emacs config highly focused around orgmode and GTD methodology, along with language support for Python and Elisp.
timetrap - Simple command line timetracker
org-reverse-datetree - An alternative date tree implementation for Emacs Org mode
notes - notes on the tools in my Unix/Linux toolbox, dotfiles, etc
remarkableflash
Titra - titra - modern open source project time tracking for freelancers and small teams
doom - Doom Emacs config