Utilities

Excellent Utilities: Watson – CLI tool to track time

Last Updated on May 22, 2022

Summary

Watson is a worthy addition to our Excellent Utilities feature. Watson’s simplicity is a virtue. The latest code even suggests the correct command if a typographical error is made.

The program offers a good range of commands, and generates useful reports. Too many times I’ve started working on a project and forgotten to start the clock. Fortunately, Watson allows you to retrospectively add a frame for a task/project. That’s really useful.

There’s lots of improvements we would like developed. For example, we would prefer better report aggregation, and the ability to show time percentages in reports, particularly for a weekly report itemized by project.

There’s shell completion for a variety of shells including bash, zsh, and Fish.

Note the project focuses on time reports. If you’re looking for software with accounting and billing functionality, you’ll need to look elsewhere.

The project’s documentation refers to a service (crick.io) that lets you store your sessions remotely and share them with your colleagues. The developers have abandoned that service, stating that it was only a proof of concept.

Watson is written in Python. Learn Python with our recommended free books and free tutorials.

Website: tailordev.github.io/Watson
Support: GitHub Code Repository
Developer: TailorDev
License: MIT License

Pages in this article:
Page 1 – Introduction / Installation
Page 2 – In Operation
Page 3 – Summary


Complete list of articles in this series:

Excellent Utilities
AES CryptEncrypt files using the Advanced Encryption Standard
AnanicyShell daemon created to manage processes’ IO and CPU priorities
brootNext gen tree explorer and customizable launcher
CerebroFast application launcher
cheat.shCommunity driven unified cheat sheet
CopyQAdvanced clipboard manager
crocSecurely transfer files and folders from the command-line
DeskreenLive streaming your desktop to a web browser
dufDisk usage utility with more polished presentation than the classic df
ezaA turbo-charged alternative to the venerable ls command
Extension ManagerBrowse, install and manage GNOME Shell Extensions
fdWonderful alternative to the venerable find
fkillKill processes quick and easy
fontpreviewQuickly search and preview fonts
horcruxFile splitter with encryption and redundancy
KoohaSimple screen recorder
KOReaderDocument viewer for a wide variety of file formats
ImagineA simple yet effective image optimization tool
LanguageToolStyle and grammar checker for 30+ languages
Liquid PromptAdaptive prompt for Bash & Zsh
lnavAdvanced log file viewer for the small-scale; great for troubleshooting
lsdLike exa, lsd is a turbo-charged alternative to ls
Mark TextSimple and elegant Markdown editor
McFlyNavigate through your bash shell history
mdlessFormatted and highlighted view of Markdown files
naviInteractive cheatsheet tool
notiMonitors a command or process and triggers a notification
NushellFlexible cross-platform shell with a modern feel
nvitopGPU process management for NVIDIA graphics cards
OCRmyPDFAdd OCR text layer to scanned PDFs
Oh My ZshFramework to manage your Zsh configuration
PaperworkDesigned to simplify the management of your paperwork
pastelGenerate, analyze, convert and manipulate colors
PDF Mix ToolPerform common editing operations on PDF files
pecoSimple interactive filtering tool that's remarkably useful
ripgrepRecursively search directories for a regex pattern
RnoteSketch and take handwritten notes
scrcpyDisplay and control Android devices
StickySimulates the traditional “sticky note” style stationery on your desktop
tldrSimplified and community-driven man pages
tmuxA terminal multiplexer that offers a massive boost to your workflow
TuskAn unofficial Evernote client with bags of potential
UlauncherSublime application launcher
WatsonTrack the time spent on projects
Whoogle SearchSelf-hosted and privacy-focused metasearch engine
ZellijTerminal workspace with batteries included
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