Filed under: Productivity, Web services
Yast offers ridiculously easy time tracking on the web
If you want to keep track of your projects in real-time, you can click the play button next to a project to start working, and then click stop when you're done. Two clicks? Even easier than a click and drag! Yast color-codes your projects and keeps track of your total time spent on them, automatically. You can zoom the timeline in and out to make selecting the right timeframe easier. Other than that, Yast has no settings to speak of. If you need anything more elaborate, you'll have to look elsewhere. If you want a bare-bones time tracker that just works, Yast is it.

I don't know if this is a labor of love or merely the brainchild of four very gifted games designers, but Level Up is a really weird mash-up of gaming elements that you have probably never seen in a Flash game before.
Let's start with the premise itself: Groundhog Day meets Memento. The game experience revolves around 'days': you explore the world and the clock slowly ticks towards the evening. You bounce around picking up gems and talking to the denizens of 'Level Upland'. Eventually you feel tired and head back to ...
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Mike Zachaczewski said 3:17PM on 11-11-2009
Not really a big deal. You shouldn't have to click start/stop when managing time. That just wastes more time.
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Kyith said 8:14PM on 11-11-2009
very true lol
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skinneejoe said 9:12AM on 11-17-2009
Not that I'm signing up for Yast soon, but I did actually take the time to look at it before commenting. There's no requirement to click start/stop, but it's an option if you want it. Basically it's a visual interface to time management. I like the idea and I think more companies should pioneer interface ideas like this.
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