JTimeTracker

JTimeTracker serves to track your work hours
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JTimeTracker Ranking & Summary

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  • Rating:
  • License:
  • GPL
  • Publisher Name:
  • Rolf F. Katzenberger
  • Operating Systems:
  • Windows All
  • File Size:
  • 5.9 MB

JTimeTracker Tags


JTimeTracker Description

JTimeTracker serves to track your work hours. It does not force you to use a stop watch approach (measure the time you spend on various tasks by starting/stopping a timer). Instead, it asks you in configurable intervals what you've done and creates a logbook entry from your answers. If you wish, you can create different templates for logbook entries, in case you e.g. wish to record different data items for different projects. JTimeTracker can export all collected data to MS Excel files for further analysis. Additionally, some basic bar charts are available within JTimeTracker, e.g. work hours per day/week/month/year or work hours per kind of logbook entry (e.g., per project). JTimeTracker's user interface supports a variety of languages and some different Look & Feel options. JTimeTracker is an application that tracks the time you spent on various projects and tasks (or whatever work item hierarchy you prefer instead, "project" and "task" are just examples). JTimeTracker helps you evaluate the tracked efforts (by summarizing, filtering, exporting to Microsoft Excel, etc.) Opposed to other tools, JTimeTracker does not work like a "stopwatch" to measure the time spent on various activities. Instead, JTimeTracker pops up in regular intervals and asks you what you are currently doing and for how long you did it (default: since it last asked you). This approach is less error-prone and it requires less overhead so now you don't have to start and stop a stopwatch for every task switch during the day. Periodically, JTimeTracker asks you to specify data for a logbook entry that tracks your activities since you were last asked. You probably don't want to type in too much additional information per entry, especially if the same information is repeated for several entries in a row, during the day. This is why entries are created from templates, so that you only need to modify the data that should not be set to default values. JTimeTracker remembers the last values you specified, for your convenience. You can also reuse any old logbook entry values to fill in a template.


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