Thanks for bringing me into the conversation! :) I'm sooooo far from that sort of thing right now. Rough activity tracking by buttons and voice shortcuts on my phone is all I can manage with a toddler around. Marcin, I wonder if you might like to adapt some code from sachachua.com/dotemacs for clocking into a task by taking advantage of the org refiling system, and the idea of setting up a hydra or other shortcuts for common tasks. The code might need to be updated, not sure. If you're using Org and another time tracking system that might have better reports, you might like to set up something like what I have, where I can use a single key to clock into both Org and Quantified Awesome with a pre-defined or prompted category. I find time analysis useful for things like calibrating my estimates and expectations, learning about my revealed preferences and trends over time, and feeling more satisfied about my days/weeks/months. I liked using the data to build on my strengths and work around my limits instead of giving in to the temptation to use it as a harsh taskmaster. :) I wonder if something similar might be helpful for you. Have fun! On Tue, Oct 16, 2018, 16:42 Adam Porter, wrote: > Hi Marcin, > > That sounds very geekily interesting. :) I imagine Sacha Chua might be > interested as well, although she already has a sophisticated system for > her Quantified Life stuff. > > I'd be interested in looking at your code. For several years I've used > a "pomodoro"-like shell script to help stay on-task. It would be nice > to do it in Org instead (I know about org-pomodoro, but it doesn't do as > much as my script does). > > >