Watson
notes
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Watson | notes | |
---|---|---|
7 | 17 | |
2,387 | 53 | |
1.3% | - | |
0.0 | 1.5 | |
10 months ago | about 1 year ago | |
Python | Vim Script | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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
notes
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Blog: Terminal file managers and my Vifm setup
I've documented some really cool things that vifm can do: https://github.com/sitaramc/notes/blob/master/vifm.mkd
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Prevent Thunar from writing lines to config file, or alternatively make git ignore certain lines
So I wrote https://github.com/sitaramc/notes/blob/master/dac -- 30 lines of shell plus maybe another 30 or 40 of comments, and it does everything I want in a dotfile manager.
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What tools/methods do you use to track/journal all changes to your (desktop) system?
All this is painlessly taken care of by https://github.com/sitaramc/notes/blob/master/dac (documentation: https://github.com/sitaramc/notes/blob/master/dac.mkd)
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ncdu - ncurses disk usage - see which directories and files are hogging the most space
If you have fzf installed, grab https://github.com/sitaramc/notes/blob/master/try, and run try dust. Then start typing -t jpg (for example). Then backspace over the jpg and change it to png. Or use some other options.
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what is the easiest way to backup your config files?
I hesitate to nominate any of them because (a) there are dozens or even hundreds of them and (b) I don't like any of them; I wrote my own because I needed a "hold" feature that no one had (i.e., when propagating changes to the repo, I want to hold back some parts of the change; https://github.com/sitaramc/notes/blob/master/dac.mkd explains better if you're interested
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Do you use VIFM?
For those of you who are curious, https://github.com/sitaramc/notes/blob/master/vifm.mkd is my part "review" and part "tips and tricks" on vifm.
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What tools / utilities have you written that you use regularly?
Most of my tools are in bash or perl, most of them less than 100 lines of code, (most of them are less than 200 even with comments). https://github.com/sitaramc/notes has all of them (terrible name for a repo full of tools I know; sorry!)
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Seeking a terminal file manager
Absolutely vifm. My notes+tips/tricks on this at https://github.com/sitaramc/notes/blob/master/vifm.mkd
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Should I use vim or neovim?
https://github.com/sitaramc/notes/blob/master/dac.mkd for documentation, https://github.com/sitaramc/notes/blob/master/dac.mkd for code, if you're interested.
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difference between terminal file managers?
if you're a vim user, you can't go wrong with vifm. My take on vifm is here: https://github.com/sitaramc/notes/blob/master/vifm.mkd -- can't hurt to give it a read (it's a wee bit outdated but not much; probably only the last section needs to be updated)
What are some alternatives?
timetracker - Basic Time tracker built with Python. Track what applications you spend your most time on.
clifm - The shell-like, command line terminal file manager: simple, fast, extensible, and lightweight as hell.
Leantime - Leantime is a goals focused project management system for non-project managers. Building with ADHD, Autism, and dyslexia in mind.
smenu - smenu started as a lightweight and flexible terminal menu generator, but quickly evolved into a powerful and versatile CLI selection tool for interactive or scripting use.
server - self-hosted tag-based time tracking
vifm.vim - Vim plugin that allows use of vifm as a file picker
timetrap - Simple command line timetracker
suda.vim - 🥪 An alternative sudo.vim for Vim and Neovim, limited support sudo in Windows
Titra - titra - modern open source project time tracking for freelancers and small teams
nbrowser - 🔗 🌐 : an easy way to open links in browsers, mimic the "Open URL with..." dialog on Android, `nbrowser` help you open links in a browser
timed-frontend - Ember.js UI for the Timed application
dedupe - :id: A python library for accurate and scalable fuzzy matching, record deduplication and entity-resolution.