> To motivate people focusing on there work, something like the link below could be > an idea, especially for gamers ;) > > https://habitica.com/static/home It would be great to integrate it with Org. Roland Everaert writes: > Regarding auto-clocking, you should look at what norang did. > > http://doc.norang.ca/org-mode.html > > To motivate people focusing on there work, something like the link below could be > an idea, especially for gamers ;) > > https://habitica.com/static/home > > Samuel Wales writes: > >> auto-clocking might be interesting. >> >> there would be a concept of a dominating clocking entry similar to >> dominating file. i.e. if where you are is not a clocking entry, go up >> until you find one that is. if you find none at top level, you create >> a clock entry in the logbook there. >> >> if you switch buffers or move around, you clock out and in where you >> were and are. every few minutes, you try to clock in where you are, >> or the dominating clocking entry. this is done with timers. idle >> time might go to a special clocking entry. >> >> or something like that. the idea is that you don't have to remember >> to clock in and out. >> >> On 10/10/18, Marcin Borkowski wrote: >>> >>> On 2018-10-10, at 18:50, William Denton wrote: >>> >>>> On 10 October 2018, Marcin Borkowski wrote: >>>> >>>>> I am making an Org-mode-based tool to help boost my productivity. >>>>> ... >>>>> - is anyone interested in something like this? >>>> >>>> I am---I'd love to see what you come up with. I'm doing something >>>> similar, but much less fancy, with clock tables and some R: >>>> >>>> https://www.miskatonic.org/2017/11/16/clocktableii/ >>>> >>>> I need to do one more post about that to wrap it up. It's working >>>> well for me, but warnings about not being clocked in to something, and >>>> better understanding of what I'm doing based on headings or tags, >>>> would be useful. >>> >>> Thanks for your kind words! >>> >>> It's not that fancy (yet?), but has one big advantage over clock tables: >>> it updates dynamically (using org-clock-out-hook), so it's fast. Also, >>> as you could see, it does some simple calculations. >>> >>> And for the record: it's based on properties, not tags - but that is >>> a minor issue. >>> >>> Best, >>> >>> -- >>> Marcin Borkowski >>> http://mbork.pl >>> >>> > > > -- > Luke, use the FOSS > > Sent from Emacs >