
aTimeLogger
Loop Habit Tracker
Toggl
myPoli
ManicTime
Hapit
Leap Habits
ATracker
CloudCLI
GitHub Codespaces
Gitpod
Qoder IDE
aTimeLogger is a personal time tracker developed since 2011, built for tracking your whole life rather than billing work hours. Start and stop any activity with one tap, run several activities at once, pause and resume, and review where your time goes with pie charts, bar graphs, and detailed history. Set goals with reminders, use the built-in Pomodoro timer, and export your data to CSV or HTML at any time. Unlike team-oriented trackers such as Toggl or Clockify, aTimeLogger has no employee monitoring, invoicing, or admin dashboards โ it's designed for individuals: students tracking study time, parents logging baby care, quantified-self enthusiasts, and anyone building time awareness (including ADHD users who need lightweight, friction-free tracking). Free version included โ track unlimited activities at no cost. Premium (subscription or one-time lifetime purchase) adds advanced statistics, goals, and sync across devices. Apps for iPhone, Apple Watch, Android, Wear OS, web, and macOS
Most engineering teams run AI coding agents on individual laptops. Close the lid, lose the session. When a new developer joins, they spend hours recreating the same setup.
CloudCLI gives your team shared cloud environments where AI agents run 24/7. Every developer gets their own isolated container, but the team shares MCP servers, context files, and configurations across all projects. Onboarding takes minutes.
Sessions can be started through a full REST API, so workflows in Linear, Jira, or n8n can trigger background coding agents programmatically. A ticket gets filed, an agent starts coding, the developer reviews the PR in the morning.
The web UI and mobile interface include a file explorer, git explorer, and full shell access. Review PRs on your iPad, make fixes from your phone, then pick up in VS Code over SSH.
Unlike GitHub Codespaces, CloudCLI is purpose-built for agentic development. Claude Code, Cursor CLI, Codex, and Gemini CLI come pre-installed. Sessions survive laptop closure. Teams bring their own API keys with no vendor lock-in.
Built on an open-source core (AGPL-3, 9,000+ GitHub stars). Self-host for data sovereignty or use the managed service from โฌ7/month.
aTimeLogger
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aTimeLogger's answer
aTimeLogger is built for tracking your whole life, not just work. Most time trackers are designed around billable hours, clients, and teams; aTimeLogger is designed around a person's day โ work, study, sleep, sport, reading, family time, habits. One tap starts or stops any activity, several activities can run simultaneously, and detailed statistics show where your time actually goes. It has been in continuous development by the same developer since 2011, which is rare longevity in this category โ the app has outlived dozens of competitors while staying focused on personal time tracking.
CloudCLI's answer:
CloudCLI is one of the only cloud development environments built specifically for AI coding agents. Where Codespaces and Gitpod give you a cloud editor, CloudCLI gives your agents a persistent home that stays alive 24/7. What makes it particularly valuable for teams: shared MCP servers and environment configs mean every developer starts from the same baseline. A full REST API means sessions can be triggered from automation tools, not just opened manually. Background agents can run overnight and produce PRs for review in the morning. And the entire platform is open source (AGPL-3) so teams can self-host on their own infrastructure.
aTimeLogger's answer
Choose aTimeLogger if you want to understand and improve how you spend your time as an individual. Compared to Toggl, Clockify, or Harvest, there is no employee monitoring, invoicing, or team administration โ and none of that complexity in the interface. Compared to automatic desktop trackers like RescueTime or Rize, aTimeLogger works where your life happens: on your phone and watch, covering offline activities like sleep, workouts, commuting, or childcare that no desktop tracker can see. There's a genuinely usable free version, and Premium is available as a one-time lifetime purchase โ not only a subscription. If you need team timesheets or client billing, a work-oriented tracker will serve you better; for everything else in your day, aTimeLogger will.
CloudCLI's answer:
Compared to tools like GitHub Codespaces, CloudCLI is purpose-built for agentic development rather than traditional coding. Here's what sets it apart:
aTimeLogger's answer
Individuals who want time awareness in their personal life: students tracking study hours, parents logging childcare, athletes and fitness enthusiasts, quantified-self practitioners, freelancers tracking their own working patterns, and people with ADHD who benefit from lightweight, low-friction time tracking. The common thread is tracking for yourself โ not reporting to a manager or billing a client.
CloudCLI's answer:
CloudCLI is built for engineering teams that use AI coding agents as part of their daily workflow. This includes teams adopting agentic development practices with tools like Claude Code, Cursor CLI, or Codex who need shared environments where MCP servers, context files, and configurations stay consistent across every developer. It also serves engineering managers looking to integrate AI agents into existing workflows through API-driven automation with tools like Linear, Jira, and n8n. Solo developers and open-source contributors who want persistent remote access from any device are also a core audience, along with organizations that need to self-host for data sovereignty or regulatory compliance.
aTimeLogger's answer
aTimeLogger started in early 2010 as a solo developer's tool for answering a simple question: where does my time actually go? Its breakthrough came from an unexpected place โ in April 2011, Nikkei, Japan's leading business newspaper, featured the app, and Japan's productivity community embraced it during the country's Drucker-inspired time-management boom. Japan remains one of its strongest markets to this day. From there the app grew by word of mouth across iPhone, Apple Watch, Android, Wear OS, web, and macOS. Sixteen years later it's still developed by the same person โ who still tracks his own time with it every day โ with the same focus: making personal time tracking effortless enough that people actually stick with it.
CloudCLI's answer:
CloudCLI started as an open-source project to solve a problem every developer using AI coding agents hits: your agent ties up your terminal and stops working when your laptop sleeps. We built a cloud-native environment where agents run persistently, paired with an open-source web UI so anyone could manage sessions from a browser or phone. As teams started adopting it, the focus shifted to shared environments, where team-wide MCP servers, configurations, and context files could be maintained in one place instead of duplicated across every developer's machine. The project grew to 9,000+ GitHub stars organically with no marketing. Today CloudCLI offers both a free self-hosted option and a managed cloud service starting at โฌ7/month.
CloudCLI's answer:
CloudCLI is built with a modern JavaScript/TypeScript stack:
The entire codebase is open source under AGPL-3 and available on GitHub.
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