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Mac OS X  |  Business / Productivity  |  Planning / Project Management  |  TrackTime

TrackTime

TrackTime - 1.2.4

track activities on a timeline with stats on music, apps...

All Time: (4.5)
Version 1.2.4: Not rated (0.0)
Selected Version: 1.2.4
Release Date: 2008-03-28
License: Commercial
Downloads (version 1.2.4): 1,398
Downloads (all versions): 6,386
Price: $19.95

Information Related to Version:

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Product Description:

TrackTime tracks all your activities on a beautiful timeline and provides statistics on applications, music, websites and your own projects.


You can see:

  • how long you listened to music by a specific artist
  • which websites you visit most and how long
  • which applications you use
  • your own projects that can be logged manually or automatically (using AppleScript)
and much more.


Features:

  • A beautiful interface - All your activities are arranged like in a multi-track-recording application. You can quickly see, how much time you spent on each "track". Discover forgotten music and websites in your personal history and enjoy them instantly again.
  • Detailed statistics - Get a quick glance on your activities and discover which are your most used applications, best rated artists or favourite websites. More precise than iTunes play count.
  • Date Range - Specify any time frame to examine. You can for example only view the music you played last month.
  • Your projects - Track working hours or your hobbies with TrackTime's easy-to-use project tracking capabilities. You can also automatically pause projects when you leave your Mac.
  • Easily delete unwanted items from your Timeline or pause logging, just like Safari's "Private Mode".
  • Growl support - Get notified what happens, using your own style.

What's new in this version:

  • Allows you to edit a project activity record
  • Better stopping/starting of projects from menu
  • Fixes scrolling bug for Leopard users

Operating System Requirements:

This product is designed to run on the following operating systems:

  • Mac OS X 10.5 Intel
  • Mac OS X 10.5 PPC
  • Mac OS X 10.4 Intel
  • Mac OS X 10.4 PPC

Additional Requirements:

  • Mac OS X 10.4 or higher

Screenshots:

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Feedback Summary:

Version 1.2.4:
Overall Rating: Not rated (0.0) Features: Not rated (0.0) Support: Not rated (0.0)
Ease of Use: Not rated (0.0) Quality / Stability: Not rated (0.0) Price: Not rated (0.0)
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TrackTime Commentarynot really a memory leak - Version: 1.2.4, 4/18/2008 02:54AM PST

mmoraglia
I have contacted the developer and he (Scotty) has been very helpful.
It is not a memory leak so all is well that ends well.
Nice application does what is says.
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TrackTime Commentaryeating up all my memory - Version: 1.2.4, 3/31/2008 07:18AM PST

mmoraglia
I was trying the application and the 14 trial days finished when I noticed that it is eating up all my memory. I hadn't noticed before so it might be to encourage to buy it.
I monitored this phenomenon with Activity Monitor. It started at 124 MB and then went up to 240MB before I quit it.
In comparison itunes is using only 90 MB and safari 99MB.
My macbook pro has been on for about 14 hours, using 10.5.2.
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TrackTime CommentaryHad to Power Down - Version: 1.2.4, 3/30/2008 10:55AM PST

Levon River
This didn't even report as an application to the Finder or the Dock. I couldn't even force quit it. It never appeared in Finder's Force Quit window. I'd had Help open for another application when I started TimeTrack, and its Help file immediately opened in front of the app when I started the app, and although TimeTrack's window was emblazoned across my screen, and although I could access it, it would not show up in the menus or anywhere in the Finder, and it was The App That Would Not Die. Never had any app in my long history of Mac usage do anything even close. I had to power down to get rid of it.

Even if I hadn't experienced this bizarre behavior, the categories in the left pane appeared to be "overlapping" each other, so the words were cut off at the bottom of each line, which seems to be rather shoddy. I also find that a program that *defaults* to tracking my musical whims and web browsing and application usage to be not only whimsical but downright invasive when all I want to track is billable hours. Even if these can be "turned off," why they are there in the first place without specific user intention to have them tracked is beyond me.

This may be a fun diversion for people curious about their own habits, but as a serious time-tracking tool I found it unusable and deleted it.

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