A performant pomodoro timer for the web.
Won't lose time in the background (thanks to web workers), controllable via keyboard, and includes a brown noise generator for extra focus. It's free, enjoy ✌️
pomodoro.lyons.land/
Me and @alecrichter_ are building a new app called Moment Notes.
It started with a problem I kept running into: my best thoughts rarely happen when I’m sitting at a keyboard. They happen while walking, cooking, parenting, working, or thinking out loud.
When you’re done, Moment Notes turns the recording into a useful note: transcript, summary, tasks, people, tags, and the original audio.
Later, you can search it or ask questions and jump back to the source.
It’s still early, and we're opening TestFlight to a small group of people who want to try it and shape where it goes.
If you’re interested, sign up for early access here: momentnotes.app
Follow along @momentnotesapp
When you’re done, Moment Notes turns the recording into a useful note: transcript, summary, tasks, people, tags, and the original audio.
Later, you can search it or ask questions and jump back to the source.
It’s still early, and we're opening TestFlight to a small group of people who want to try it and shape where it goes.
If you’re interested, sign up for early access here: momentnotes.app
Follow along @momentnotesapp
Subdivide is now available as an app on @ChatGPTapp! Create metronomes or even full click tracks just by describing what you need. And anything you create can be easily saved in the iOS app.
Check it out here: chatgpt.com/apps/subdivide/a…
The newest release for subdivide.app brings Drill Mode to our click track system. Made for marching ensembles, you can now split up tracks by drill pages to set custom start/stop points, loops, or count offs for any drill set.
Been experimenting with hooking up @openclaw with @craftdocs's API. I write daily notes like normal, the agent reads them throughout the day, pulls out action items, organizes projects, and follows up. Starting to feel like the daily notes setup I've always wanted.
As software gets easier to make, the products that stand out will be the ones crafted with uncommon care.
If that's the kind of work you want to do, I'm sharing everything I know:
interfacecraft.dev