Group related timers under projects and apply multiple tags. Filter your calendar view, generate project-specific analytics, and see time totals across all related blocks.
Visualize your productivity patterns with beautiful charts showing time tracked by project, tag, or day. Understand where your hours go with weekly/monthly comparisons and productivity trends. Export reports for billing or personal review.
Save common schedules as templates (morning routine, deep work day, meeting-heavy day). Apply them instantly to any date with one click. Set up recurring daily/weekly patterns that auto-populate.
A dedicated side panel for unscheduled timers with time estimates. Pull items into your calendar when you're ready. Optionally group by project or tag to prioritize what to schedule next.
After completing a timer, rate your focus (š, š, š¤Æ). Add optional markdown notes. Build a journal of what worked, identify patterns in your analytics, and improve your scheduling over time.
Start, stop, and view active timers directly from Raycast or a native menu bar app. Quick-add blocks, check today's schedule, and get desktop notificationsāall without context-switching from your current work.
Hide everything except your current active timer and elapsed time. Optional ambient background, progress bar, and gentle transitions between blocks. Perfect for flow state work sessions.
Assign colors to individual blocks or categories. See at a glance which blocks are meetings (blue), deep work (purple), or admin tasks (gray). Make your calendar as scannable as your physical planner.
Some blocks go long, some get skippedāmark timers as "complete" regardless of time tracked. See completion rates in analytics to understand what gets done vs. what gets scheduled.
Add formatted notes to each timer using markdown. Include links, code snippets, checklists, or meeting notes. Rich text rendering lets you look back and actually read what you did, not just how long it took.
Automatically or manually tag blocks with your location. Great for consultants tracking client sites, remote workers noting coworking spaces, or anyone wanting context about where work happened.
Working for the whole morning on a project, using occasional timers - but wanting to track the whole time? Start a project timer to explicitly track time for a project, and still use focus sessions in between.
Sometimes you just need to start tracking NOW without planning. Quick-start a timer that isn't scheduled on your calendarāit just tracks time. Perfect for unexpected tasks or open-ended exploration.
Want to script and automate your usage of Timist? Leverage an API to build your own integrations and customize Timist even further.