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Some Reflections After a Month of Tracking My Own Online Activity

HSO

I‘ve been doing sth similar by tracking my time for the last 3 weeks and change. I havent done the full analysis yet but it‘s already clear that how I think I spend my time is completely different from how I actually spend it.

Perception/„feeling“ vs physical reality. The gap is huge.

Trivial example, I was convinced that the „time toll“ i have to pay around training was very high. Like I was spending an hour or more just to change into sportswear, shower afterwards, and switch back. This perceived deadweight loss always presented an additional psychological hurdle to get off my ass and train. Now that I know that it‘s much less than I thought, it‘s gone.

Similar for cooking.

Like I said, havent done the full analysis yet but I can already highly recommend this practice of recording time at least for a while.

nextts

I spend zero (extra) time changing. I make the workout coincide with when I'd get showered anyway and typically wear clothes good enough for the gym.

Loic

May I ask what you are using to track your time?

Late edit: Especially offline time tracking.

HSO

Sure, I use ATracker (https://atracker.pro/)

They have phone apps for both iOS and Android which work offline. Their iOS app has a "companion" on the Watch too, so you can quickly switch activities on your wrist. I think without this I wouldnt have the patience to even track bathroom time (another thing that I vastly overestimated before I saw the numbers).

I´m still hovering between writing my own tracking system, for more control, and the convenience of a pre-made system. I would most miss the watch app, I think, as I have no idea how to make that.

Possible compromise would be to use this app but automate the data export and analysis in my own custom environment.

But yea, long story short, Atracker, and offline works well.

Loic

Thanks a lot for this comprehensive answer. I have a Garmin watch, maybe there is an app for it too.

As a developer, the balance between using a readymade solution or implementing is always a bit tipped on the DIY side.

vjerancrnjak

I used ActivityWatch with vim, browser, everything on Linux. (Last time I checked, make sure to have a firewall on the port)

Although did not know what to do with the data. I just saw my chess addiction subsiding. Maybe it was a side effect of seeing it at 60 hours a week.

Now it’s at 0 hours.

lazyeye

If you use windows trackerize is another good option:-

http://ravenum.com

layer8

From the website, it only takes snapshots every five minutes? I believe ManicTime registers any window focus or title change.

nthingtohide

> how I think I spend my time is completely different from how I actually spend it.

Experiencing self vs Remembering self.

After Daniel Kanheman gave a ted talk on this, I deliberately try to prioritise my experiencing self.

blitzar

That is a disturbing length of time to spend on LinkedIn.

ndegruchy

Yeah, the number is above 0.

renegat0x0

I have been gathering a lot of information about myself.

I wrote my own RSS reader. It is self hosted, so tracking is also done on phone.

I gather pages I visit through my reader, browse history, times a page was visited.

It is my window to the internet.

https://github.com/rumca-js/Django-link-archive

fmajid

For Mac Users, Qbserve is a pretty good time tracking app that observes you as you use your computer (not just the browser, although it has plugins to identify the sites you browse), and is a good way to start getting a grip on time management, even if it can be a little overwhelming at first.

eisolo

Really enjoyed going through your website. And web graph browser is super cool, just wish there was like an "expand all nodes" or "expand current level connections" button.

Also: on your main page, in the last section, the second line of the paragraph has a typo: "...Currently I'm work at..." -- I'm not trying to be annoying but thought you'd want to know (:

ninalanyon

You don't need an extension for Firefox you can get the data from places.sqlite in your Firefox profile.

A little bit of SQL and some shell script would get the statistics.

edgarvaldes

Nice analysis. I cant do something similar, because I use a myriad of devices. Since last week I have tried to simply spend less time on the phone. I want to gradually get to <1 hr a week.

tjlahr

Nice post! I’ve found Early (fka Timeular) useful for this kind of tracking.

tony-allan

An interesting (unrelated) reference in the article… https://mcwhittemore.com/web-graph-browser/

crawsome

Replicating the author's experience requires a $5/mo subscription to a feed reader/glorified bookmark manager...

metalman

meaningless

grind , when and how you want

grind harder, when you are behind the 8 ball

pay attention to your periferal vision, it's telling you stuff, same with first thoughts in the morning, they are useualy actionable but always do the self care stuff first schedules are great, if you have a lot of good things that you must maintain, but will eat you if you are trying to build from scratch or...if you are the anvil,bear if you are the hammer,strike

azan_

No, that's not meaningless, I've tracked my time and turned out I've spent much more time than I thought on one website that only made me angry, I've blocked it and saved myself hour a day and don't miss the website at all. So yeah, from my experience tracking can be very useful and meaningful.

metalman

efficiency is for machines if your grinding when you have to, then it makes no difference what when where, and how much you put into unwinding anger is good, if it's not disfunctional, and directed at actual bad things that effect you now, anger is your signal to, grind, right through the objectionable thing, if its remote like the web page, then any amount of effort is waste, and self harm so grind, or luxurate in the knowledge that, whew! no more grind power left just now timing is for refining your thing, and streamlineing, but if you got no thing grind it's meaningless to optimise, treading water, especialy when there is a beach resort that you can see and hear I would reverse the whole thing and say that if you were to time your very best moments of work, or creativity, you will find them to be shockingly brief, and remembering the specific conditions that led to those moments, is the thing to focus on and foster. baring that grind

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