So your team wasn't happy that you know how much they were slacking,
when you didn't have to run it (presumably showing 90% of your time
was spent on myley cyrus myspace page).

On Nov 10, 10:25 am, Steven Herod <[email protected]> wrote:
> It records the window title as displayed in MS Windows, so if IE shows
> the site title, then it'll be recorded.
>
> On Nov 10, 2:24 am, Robert Casto <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Any way to include the websites you are visiting and how long you are there?
>
> > On Mon, Nov 9, 2009 at 10:20 AM, Alexey Zinger <[email protected]>wrote:
>
> > > I can understand it.  I am a consultant and use a time tracker of my own
> > > creation.  Its data drives my higher level time sheets and invoices as 
> > > well
> > > as my own overview of project and task time allocation.  For one, not 
> > > every
> > > task can be represented with app usage and not every app represents a 
> > > unique
> > > task.  If my tracker shows 5 hours spent in Firefox, does that mean I'm 
> > > busy
> > > browsing Javadoc pertinent to the project, posting my resume, or goofing 
> > > off
> > > on Facebook?
>
> > > Alexey
>
> > > ------------------------------
> > > *From:* Steven Herod <[email protected]>
> > > *To:* The Java Posse <[email protected]>
> > > *Sent:* Sun, November 8, 2009 10:27:01 PM
> > > *Subject:* [The Java Posse] Re: Java Posse #276 - Roundup 09 - Where Does
> > > Developer Time Go?
>
> > > This product is for windows.  It logs all your app usage and you can
> > > go thru it afterwards.
>
> > >http://www.sphericaltech.com/
>
> > > I liked it, the team I inflicted it on hated it, they liked doing it
> > > all manually.  I never understood that :)
>
> > > On Nov 9, 10:19 am, Andrew <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > > Hi All,
>
> > > > Obviously I'm a little bit behind in my Posse listening, as I only
> > > > listened to #276 yesterday. :-)  However, I found this a really
> > > > interesting discussion, particularly because I am in a small team and
> > > > my role encompasses both development and user support.
>
> > > > One big issue I have is actually trying to track what I do each day,
> > > > so I can get a picture of what is going on with my time.  I've tried
> > > > numerous time trackers, but I generally tend to forget to switch them
> > > > when I change tasks.  The best two I have found is TimeCult (http://
> > > > timecult.sourceforge.net/) and TaskCoach (http://www.taskcoach.org/).
> > > > But it's the same issue with each - they require me to remember to
> > > > stop and start a timer.
>
> > > > Does anyone know of any decent apps that will automatically log how
> > > > much time you spend in different apps?  Eg. if I could get a picture
> > > > of the amount of time I have eclipse open versus the amount of time I
> > > > have Outlook open, I'd get a reasonable picture of how much time I am
> > > > spending answering emails from customers or my team, and how much I am
> > > > actually in my IDE.  This would be very useful when it comes to sprint
> > > > planning and trying to estimate  how much time I have to allocate to
> > > > actual development each sprint.
>
> > > > Andrew.
>
> > --
> > Robert Castowww.robertcasto.com
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