TimeSnapper 2.0 is near to completion
TimeSnapper's chief developer, Atli, put a halt to adding new features a week or two ago, so we can get ready for releasing version 2.0.
I'm glad he did. The closer we get to a release date, the more features I think of. "Oh oh! It's just got to have this!" Damn it's hard to stop.
I've been compiling lists, big lists, of features for version 3.0. Version 4. Version 53. The tighter the pressure to stop adding features: the more powerful the creative drive.
TimeSnapper has the ability to grow in a number of different directions. (At this point, you can picture an ice crystal forming -- spreading out in a beautiful though slightly assymmetric way)
It has these divergent goals:
- A Time Tracker
- Personal time
- Official time
- A Scenario Capturer
- Lazy capture: e.g. "oops my computer just crashed, what did i do to cause it?"
- Deliberate capture: e.g. "I'll record this action, and then turn it into a movie." (not yet a feature)
- A Productivity Booster
- Self-awareness, e.g. "How do I usually get distracted?"
- A complement to a "Getting Things Done" system.
And, as people love to point out:
- Surveillance
- (A direction we've deliberately avoided)
With all those possible goals and sub goals, the array of possible features becomes a vast fractal monster. We've continually sought suggestions and help from our user-base. Not so much to generate ideas, but to give some weighting to the cornucopia of ideas the product has already given us.
It's a weird little product, you know. While other software is doing similar things on some fronts, I think that the TimeSnapper package represents a unique and special niche that is previously unexplored. Thus the voluminous possibilities.
Of course this too presents more possible tasks: create a website where people can suggest features, vote on features, give reasons for liking features and so on. Add features to the feature voting website. Have people vote on what features to add to the features website. Or survey the existing software out there for doing this. Which software is best? Maybe I could write a website where people vote on their favourite software for conducting polls about what features to add to their feature suggestion website. Or maybe we could... maybe we could just finish version 2.0 of TimeSnapper, and build up the courage to release it to the world.
Even the world's simplest code generator is on hold for now. With my current featuritis, i can't be let anywhere near that product. It risks becoming the world's most complex code generator, data miner and email client. With a sandwich maker and hybrid-fuelcell/chicken-coop-cleaner on a collapsible side panel.
Enough. Back to the grind.
'Farmer Jeb' on Mon, 08 May 2006 00:48:02 GMT, sez: Actually my chicken coop needs cleaning. I usually feed "the girls" but my wife did it the other day. She told me later that their coop needs cleaning. The thing is it always needs cleaning but after a couple of weeks it doesn't/can't get any worse. So why clean it? Still, it needs cleaning.
'k' on Sat, 27 May 2006 02:53:04 GMT, sez: What about for testing purposes!
You can record a bug using the screenshots and you can see what you did to cause it.
'greg' on Tue, 13 Jun 2006 16:19:31 GMT, sez: what'd be nice is a 'maintain aspect ratio' button somewhere in the 'view' configuration tab, so that when you resize the window, the displayed image doesn't squish to a very-tall or very-flat representation of the desktop.
'greg' on Tue, 13 Jun 2006 16:23:00 GMT, sez: Another nice feature would be if it could generate a snapshot of all applications that are open (perhaps in application z-order, so that the top-most window comes first in the list). This could be represented in a single file with a simple syntax; e.g.
=== 10:08:10
c:\program files\internet explorer\explorer.exe
c:\program files\ultraedit\uedit32.exe
.....
=== 10:08:20
c:\program files\internet explorer\explorer.exe
c:\program files\ultraedit\uedit32.exe
.....
or perhaps one file per snapshot.
One of the nice things of the existing utility is that the files it generates are simple .gif/.bmp/.whatever files, which can then be post-processed by other tools; generating a list of open applications as a simple text file would make writing 3rd party analysis tools easier.
'lb' on Tue, 13 Jun 2006 21:17:33 GMT, sez: hey greg -- regardng 'maintain aspect ratio' -- this is included in the latest version.
Version 2.0 has 'Maintain Aspect Ratio' and 'Centered' as the two view options in the context menu of the day browser.
Regarding a list of the files in use-- we're working on it. ;-)
lb
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