Hilariously, I've also used this for janky speed run time tracking while gaming since you just hit enter and it keeps going, it's not very good at that but it works...
A nice feature would be to export the Timelite log into an ical file or directly into calendar.
Somewhat off-topic, but where I work we don't need timesheets - so as an employee my main use-case for time tracking is actually to track my overtime. However most services seem to focus on the employer perspective - which is probably a reasonable product strategy.
So does anyone know a good solution for overtime tracking? Currently I'm using Nokotime in combination with a self-written node.js script that calculates my overtime per week / in total. While I love Nokotimes' UI I would consider switching if there was a tool/service that made the overtime thing easier.
When you say "free time", do you mean "free time at work", or just in general?
The point of Timelite is to not compete with things like this but to be a lightweight quick time tracking solution. It in no way is a Clockify replacement, and if your entire company and development process goes through Clockify then Timelite may be a useless tool for you.
I've been working on my own different take on time tracking too (https://maesure.com) which asks you periodically what you're doing and builds a picture of the day from that.
Especially with it's desktop app
Timewarrior automatically tracks your time using [start][1] and [stop][2] commands. It also works like a Stopwatch[3], no start command needed.
[1] https://timewarrior.net/docs/timew-start.1.html
- $ timew help
- $ timew [command] help
Once learned you won't need them anymore. ;-)