Kind of unrelated to the app, but wanted to share a related thought that's been useful to me over the years in case it's useful for anyone else.
I have pretty strong ADHD. Pomodoro and other time tracking techniques never really worked well for me long-term because they end up being associated with a lot of anxiety and self-shame as I used them, so I tend to stop using them as negative feelings build up.
Now I use them differently. I'll set the timer for 30 - 45 minutes and when it goes off I ask myself if I'm using my time in the way I intended. I try to ask it in a non-judgmental way and the answer is mostly unrelated to the process. Sometimes it's fine that I got off on a tangent; sometimes it's not. The goal is really just to be aware that time is passing and have built in moments where I'm conscious of how it's being used.
When I'm consistent about it (which isn't always), I find that I'm much more aware of how I'm actually using my time, which tends to lead toward naturally using it better but again, I try to separate the awareness from the tracking and planning.
I personally use a physical clock like this one but I think using a website or clock is really personal preference: https://www.amazon.com/Hexagon-Rotating-Minute-Preset-Countd...
I like that one because I enjoy the physical feeling of rotating it. I also like that the alarm is the light blue backlight flashing, which feels less aggressive and psychologically traumatic than my phone alarm.
That's also not to say pomodoro is bad for someone with adhd. I still use similar methods and I think there are techniques for being more successful with it that I wasn't employing. I just like to separate the time/task management from time awareness now and feel that it's useful for me.
I was medicated as a 90s kid, then went a long time without being medicated. It took awhile to get medicated again and a longer time to be okay with it as a part of my life instead of constantly trying to wean myself off of it because of lingering stigmas around medications and mental health.
The timer for me is 100% in conjunction with meds and other life strategies for managing my ADHD and honestly, even then it feels crippling at times, especially since I've been laid off. Without the day-to-day structure of a job, my brain feels like a tornado in fog a lot of days.
Context is another big one for me. I don't do well working from home, so if I have a remote job I rent a small office. Part of it is having "work context" and part is just the fact that I don't have a VR headset, a thousand books on random hobbies, ten unbuilt lego sets, and a shelf of books on elm, clojure, idris, or whatever random language I'm interested in that week.
Anyhow, what you're saying makes a ton of sense. I feel like the timer thing just helps me specifically with even being aware of time at all, but I really find that coping mechanisms for adhd are super varied.
Appreciate you contributing your own experience, though, and highlighting that it's not as simple as one or two life hacks
One weird thing that works me is playing reality TV in the background (love and hip hop, vanderpump ect). Seems to have really calming effect on my brain which lets me focus on work. I've realized over the years that my adhd is just suppressed anxiety in disguise and reality TV masks it.
If I am engaging in rote work that doesn’t require much creativity or doesn’t fully engage my mind, then part of my attention tends to wander. It might not lead to total distraction, but it does produce an uneasy feeling I describe as anxiety.
I always imagined that music can serve a similar function in others, but I believe that my having been a musician (and a serious one when I was younger) causes me to engage a little too deeply into whatever music is playing, so it’s a little too active for me.
I had a period where I’d play old episodes of Mr. Rogers while working.
When one of my kids was an infant, the only thing that would get him back to sleep in the middle of the night was watching shows like House Hunters on HGTV.
Something about the chill vibe, people interacting kindly and relatively quietly, nice scenery, no music or sound effects, longer durations without cuts.
Contrast this with, say, Sports Center on ESPN, where it’s a constant blitz on the senses.
I usually can't do any background noise with a pattern but there are a handful of albums I've listened to hundreds of times while working over the years in the same way I think you're talking about. I ended up finally ripping them from old cd's because every year Spotify would tell me that I basically no other music mattered to me in comparison ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I also listen to mynoise.net (a gem of the internet) pretty often. Over the years a few of their tracks have become mentally associated with a sort of calm productivity for me
System Settings > Control Center > Clock > Clock Options
For me, The act of starting the pomodoro timer itself was the chore, I think being contextually aware of pomodoro timer was a drag to me.
So I fixed that by creating a butt triggered timer which starts when I sit on my chair and reminds me to get off the chair after 25 mins and triggers the break timer when I do. The whole process is un-attended and I didn't have to be aware of the timer at all.
Then I went overboard and built a game around it using WASM & what not[1] which defeated the whole purpose of me not having to be aware of the timer, So I again went back to the basics and built a new Simple Butt Mover[2] which I use regularly now with huge quality of life improvement.
P.S. Congratulations to OP for the launch of their Pomodoro timer.
It reminds me of recently thinking that my clothes are only neatly folded after I learn a new way to fold them, so maybe I should just invent one every week, lol--which feels a little less tenable than the watch idea
Really cool way you're coopting the novelty like that
There are also no notifications or sounds in your website (I may have nuked all browser notifications at some point, to combat asshole webdesign, and now I have no idea if that's a default setting).
The 100% expected scenario of how ADHD person would use your timer is open it, set up a timer, check it periodically if it has finished or not, happily get to first break, then setup second work period, forget about timer until 3 days later, and find it when cleaning up open tab. Close it forever. Source - this would be a fifth or so exact same pomodoro "app"-website I've tried and abandoned.
You can convert the tab into a window and keep it visible :)
It is easy issue to avoid until that one time you accidentally forget about it. So I try to avoid multiple windows of Firefox.
Also if we are talking about a separate icon on the taskbar, then why not make it a dedicated app with proper settings, notifications and stuff, which you can't forget or disable?
Also, as you prob know, there are multiple free/FOSS native taskbar based pomodoro apps that really get out the way, what is the advantage of using a browser based on?
a) making the start of your tasks just a simple press of a button
b) keeping your progress of time and your deadline right in front of you.
It's just another one of pomodoro apps that I made specifically for myself and wanted to share in case someone wants to use it as well :)
Then it really shouldn't be a browser app, it needs to be a local app that runs in the taskbar.
I've made two of these in the past:
V1, browser based: the browser simply wasn't viable because there's no taskbar timer.
V2, Bash+zenity script to run locally, pops up a uncloseable, uncoverable and omnipresent (across all workspaces) window, with a progress bar showing the time as it elapses[1], and properly sends desktop notifications. A much more functional experience than V1 which was invisible while I was working, stuck on a single workspace (I have nine in a 3x3 grid) and frequently didn't send notifications.
V3, Next iteration, local application without a window but with taskbar integration for timer display. Might just decide to hack zenity to provide a 'taskbar' widget.
[1] If you're interested my V2 app (run locally), see https://gist.github.com/lelanthran/bbbcf5c8b6b26c9bc0263384a...
Unless you keep your browser tab open, you can’t see it. A “gauge” icon in the browser bar would be enough to actually be in view without being distracting. Repackaging as a plug-in would give you a tab-free icon.
Webapps like this are very useful to me.
Unfortunately, as part of my special duties, I need to run an operating system that is not compatible with this framework.
I abhor these setups. Luckly every time I've been in them it's been realtively easy to get an exception.
I can't think of many situations I'd stay at a company like this unless it was very easy to get necessary software added within 3-5 business days.
As someone with ADHD, I think that simplicity is key when it comes to ADHD-friendly tools.
I love the the simplicity of the app. However, one feature that I think is particularly helpful for ADHD users is the option to play ambient sounds during the work sessions.
I used to use https://asoftmurmur.com/ for ambient sounds but it's not a Pomodoro timer.
Just found http://pomoup.com/ yesterday on a Show HN post and it has everything I need.
Until I got diagnosed, I thought Pomodoro to be "keep focused for 30 minutes, do not context-switch, do not get distracted" timer.
After I got diagnosed (thankfully a mild case) and started taking medications, the use of Pomodoro switched to "don't sit more than half an hour focused on one task without standing up, streching and getting some tea" mode.
You can use this phase switch to your advantage, to measure the degree of ADHDness and efficacy of medication.
Does anyone else get anxiety from watching the timer get close to 0 and not being nearly done with you've set out to do in the pomo?
Also since my tasks are on the calendar the 'what am I going to do next' decision paralysis is taken care of, and since they all occupy some amount of linear time they are real objects instead of just a virtual infinity list.
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/FDCJ2BfAT9qJGrpFa/what-s-wro...
This gave me a good chuckle
What I learned to do is just work when I feel like it and so take the break - trust my instinct.
It's like an inverted pomodoro. Set a timer and track how long you work. When your work has a natural break (you pushed some code, etc.), pause the timer and take a break based on how long you worked.
1: https://medium.com/@UrgentPigeon/the-flowtime-technique-7685...
Could you make a mode that is not 24hr but is 12hr am/pm? I find seeing 13:32 does not compute for my American brain.
That's it, the biggest thing is having something by you/on you that works. I didn't know how to use the Clock app fully outside of different timezones/alarms. I was surprised there was countdown. You can extend continuously, so you can set 15 mins or 30 mins countdown and have it continue all day if you so desire.
It's pretty powerful, I wonder how many basic built in features of operating systems I completely miss - because, the clock app seems innocent enough, it's application is really unlimited.
One thing I've wanted from a pomo timer is a simple way to mark the number of distractions I've had.
The site is showing the correct timezone for me on safari.
I didn't know about the UTC thing in firefox, usually it will show the correct local time. But now that you mention it, the online booking system for the local vaccination centre shows the time in UTC, too. Recently I actually filed a bug report to their administration because of that.
All other sites I can think of — including https://time.is/ — are showing the correct localtime.
I love how the age of AI development is making whipping up an app like this for personal use more viable. I created a CLI study flashcard with progress tracking app in <30 minutes for my own purposes the other day.
It is simple, easy, effective, and the single best ROI of any app I have ever paid for.
Not affiliated with these guys, but this sh*t just /works/ for me.
i don't have diagnosed adhd but my dad does and i'm just too lazy (ha) to get an evaluation myself. for whatever reason, having this tool and knowing there's a break coming makes is much easier to stay focused for the working time.
so thanks for creating and sharing! :D
But the "let's get to work" button doesn't have enough contrast in light mode.
I also appreciate the dark mode.
Well done, sir.