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Jrnull
'jrnull' tracks time and extracts it for reporting purposes. It's simple, flexible, and lets users make entries after the fact. It is meant for the solitary programmer who has a straightforward need to report the time spent on various projects.
Kanban
Personal Kanban automatically manages 3 permanent lists of things to do, using the Kanban method for organizing your work. This method is meant for software development and secondarily for other important formal tasks. In the kanban method, each list is called "bucket" and has a maximum number of elements. In this kanban, the lists are:
  1. Tasks performed -- called the "Completed" list;
  2. Tasks to be performed -- called the "Todo" list;
  3. Potential tasks -- called the "Options" list.
Personal Kanban can be punitive enough to prevent a project from being neglected. More information on Azure DevOps.
Meetmint
I had this scenario in mind when writing meetmint: 1) I am at a meeting and supposed to write the minutes. 2) I have my laptop with me and even without internet connectivity I can use meetmint, which I previously put on my harddisk. 3) If I know there is internet connectivity, I can also get the tool from a website. 4) If there is a video projector in the room, I will use it and others can not only see the notes I'm taking, but they also have a visual structure of the meeting (current topic, agenda, used time).
Monica Personal CRM
Monica is a free software web application to organize the interactions with your loved ones. We call it a PRM, or Personal Relationship Management. Think of it as a CRM (a popular tool used by sales teams in the corporate world) for your friends or family. Monica allows people to keep track of everything that's important about their friends and family. Like the activities done with them. When you last called someone. What you talked about. It will help you remember the name and the age of the kids. It can also remind you to call someone you haven't talked to in a while.
OneModel
Today: You can take notes with it. Rearrange them easily, up and down in a list, or up/down in the hierarchy. Link them to each other. Navigate across links with simple keypresses. Make deeply nested lists. Link lists to lists. Compose long paragraphs and attach them. Or do more complicated things if desired, by creating relationship types and using those. Import txt or export txt or html. It's better than the alternatives for some people, because the navigation takes fewer keystrokes, you don't have to read a manual (it's all on the screen, or so I like to think), you can have the same thing in as many places as you want, it is Free (some alternatives are, others are not), and it has immense future potential for becoming a better-structured, much more powerful and flexible wikipedia-like tool, if we work together. Vision: The idea is to have the most efficient personal knowledge organizer (now available in a usable text-based interface), then support mobile access, easy internal automation, and effective sharing and collaboration. Then, to combine efforts and learn as we go until we integrate humankind's knowledge over time. The key differentiators are that it is to be Free, and based on an object model (easily created on the fly as a side-effect of using the system), rather than on massive amounts of words. The knowledge is the same, even if the words can change. One can think of that as "using building blocks of knowledge, starting at an atomic level (i.e. numbers, relationships...), free and efficient." Or, taking the best experiences of online organizer tools and wikis, but more structured, efficient, Free, open, and collaborative; and allowing full individual or organizational control.
Org
Org is an Emacs mode for keeping notes, lists and doing project management with a fast and effective plain-text system. Org-mode is based on top of the Emacs outline-mode and provides a very usable outliner with powerful functionality.
PMbyAS
Italian web-based management system for time/money spent by resources, day by day. Reports "on flight","from... to..." (single day to many years). Single job can refer to customer order, inner or external project; every activity of the company.
PyTodo
PyTodo is a simple program for managing todo lists.
Roundup
Roundup is a simple-to-use issue-tracking system. It has command-line, Web, and e-mail interfaces. It manages issues (with flexible properties like “description” and “priority” and lets users (a) submit new issues, (b) find and edit existing issues, and (c) discuss issues with other participants. The system facilitates communication among participants by managing discussions, and notifying interested parties when issues are edited.
SandSurfer
'SandSurfer' is a Web-based Perl CGI time tracking application. It supports employee time sheet entry, auto clock in and auto clock out, gross wage calculations for each employee in a given time period, export of data to a file, billing rates per client per job.
Sw-logger
Stopwatch is a rather basic timer, with both a command line and graphical user interface (GUI). In addition to the usual start, stop, reset and clear (new) functions, Stopwatch implements a rather large number of user-named lap timers - 27 in the GUI mode, limited only by memory from the command line. GUI uses GTK+ libraries, and automatically detects and uses Hildon libraries when running on a Nokia 770 Gnu GNU/Linux-based handheld.
Taglog
Taglog is designed for people who spend their day working at a computer. You can make notes about what you do as you go along, and associate them with specified projects. You can then produce a report of how your time was spent, broken down by project for booking purposes. You can view the previous entries by date or by project, enter the actions you intend to take, associate them with a project, and mark them as active or complete. Taglog's electronic workbook combines logging time to projects with a detailed diary of what you actually do. You can tag individual work elements by project to produce record of a specific project, even if your time is spread across a number of projects or by activity type (meeting, phone, program, etc.) to track time by activity.
Time Tracker
TimeTracker puts up a list of projects, and the number of minutes worked on each. You click on the project you want to work on, and it starts counting on that. At the end of the day, it saves the collected data in a file, and you can use a script to process the data.
Timebook
Timebook is a small utility which aims to be a low-overhead way of tracking what you spend time on. It can be used to prepare annotated time logs of work for presentation to a client, or simply track how you spend your free time. Timebook is implemented as a python script which maintains its state in a sqlite3 database.
Todo.py
todo.py is a script modeled after Gina Trapani's todo.txt-cli project which manages your list of items that you wish to accomplish. It allows you to use contexts, projects, dates and priorities to organize and display your todos. It gives you the flexibility to define colors for certain priorities to make them stand out and allows you to specify a default action. It is extensible through both bash and python add-ons.
Ttl.lua
Couple lua scripts to translate text using google translate. Main ttl script can be deleted and used from lua only like translate.lua script module.
UStopwatch
µStopwatch is a simple stopwatch, developed as a sample application for learn how to use Onsen UI and develop for Firefox OS.
V-linux-tools
A set of GNU/Linux command line tools.
v-hwclock
A command for manipulating hardware / system clock.
v-pwgen
A password generator producing subset of ascii printable characters.
Wger
wger (ˈvɛɡɐ) is free software that manages your exercises and personal workouts, weight and diet plans. It can also be used as a simple gym management utility, providing different administrative roles (trainer, manager, etc.). It offers a REST API as well, for easy integration with other projects and tools.
Workaholic
Workaholic is a program which shows a window to remind you to take a break after a period of time by showing a transparent window with a progress bar. You can skip rests, or postpone these for 5 or 10 minutes.
WxRemind
wxRemind is a wxPython-based front-end for Remind, a powerful calendar and alarm application. Similar to the curses-based Wyrd, the display features a calendar and daily event list suitable for visualizing your schedule at a glance. Dates and associated events can be quickly selected either with the mouse or cursor keys, and dates in the calendar are color coded to reflect the total duration of scheduled events. wxRemind provides an internal editor or integrates with an external editor of your choice to make editing of reminder files more efficient, provides hotkeys to quickly access the most common Remind options, and allows popup, sound, and/or spoken alarms.


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