My sincere thanks to Timing for sponsoring my writing this week.
Timing is the best way to keep track of the time you spend with your Mac. It lets you find out where your time goes – without ever having to start a timer again!
Timing automatically tracks which documents you’re editing, which applications you use, and the websites you visit. After tracking, you can drag and drop activities into projects. Some general categories like “Web Browsing”, “Office” and “Games” have already been prepared for you, but you can customize them any way you like.
Easily review what you’ve done this week with just one click. Sophisticated graphs show you how you spent your time each day and which projects (or websites *cough* Facebook *cough*) consumed most of your time. And if you need the raw data to create invoices, Timing can export it as CSV or JSON for further processing.
These are just a few of the applications for which Timing can track the document path or domain:
- Safari
- Chrome & Chromium
- Preview
- iWork
- MS Office
- Scrivener
- Evernote
- Photoshop
- Finder
- Xcode
- Coda
- QuickTime Player
- VLC Player
If the document path isn’t available for some other apps, Timing will automatically fall back to the window title. Tracking will automatically be suspended after a configurable time of inactivity and resumed as soon as you return to the computer.
Timing is discounted by 25% this week only, so buy it now on the Mac App Store or download a free trial version from our website.
This is a sponsored post via Syndicate Ads.
If you’re interested in sponsoring my writing for a week, and reaching my audience of tech-savvy, curious, creative thinkers, you can find more information here.