Time Tracking + Automation = Productivity with the Timing App (Sponsor)


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This week MacSparky is sponsored by Timing  a Mac app that keeps granular track of your time without relying on you to keep pressing buttons like those guys on Lost. Instead, Timing automatically tracks which apps, documents and websites you use — without start/stop timers. It then intelligently sorts that for you, assembling a beautiful time-tracking report.

You can point it at your calendar to help Timing figure out what you were working on so if you are a time blocker like me, you are already ahead, again automatically. Timing also can sync data between multiple Macs and even gives you a web view of your data. And if you are away from your Mac, Timing has a web app to track time from anywhere.

The Timing team is even adding team support so members can share projects across an entire team. If you are interested contact Timing’s developer for more details.

I’m a fan of timing. There is no better way to get accurate time reports of what you are doing on your Mac. Go download the free 14-day trial today and get 10% off for the first year!

Upgrade Any Email App with SaneBox (Sponsor)

This week MacSparky is sponsored by SaneBox, the email service I use every day to manage my email. SaneBox acts as your email assistant, sorting your inbox for you, so you only see the most important emails with less important email getting relegated to other mailboxes for later.

The best part is that it can work with just about any domain, email service, or email app. All of those great SaneBox features, like inbox sorting, snoozing, the black hole, and reminders when folks don’t reply to essential emails are yours without trapping yourself in a proprietary app. That’s why companies like eBay, Coca-Cola, Adidas, and LinkedIn are all using SaneBox.

SaneBox serves as a set of power tools for email, and you can have it today without switching providers or mail applications. If you’d like to become the boss of your email, go sign up for a free SaneBox trial today to get a significant discount when you sign up.

Calling Cards You Can Be Proud of with Hoban Cards (Sponsor)

Let’s talk for a minute about your calling cards. What are you handing out? Something silly you got from a big box store or something you made on your printer? Your calling card represents you. Why not bring some intentionality to your game? This week, MacSparky is sponsored by Hoban Cards, where they use a 1902 letterpress machine to make cards that your colleagues, clients, and customers will never forget. I sure love mine.

Evan and the gang at Hoban Cards are masters at the craft of designing and making letterpress calling cards. They have some beautiful templates to choose from, or you can roll your own.

There is no doubt I am a geek, but I have to admit that I really love handing out letterpress cards. It is always a conversation starter. Put simply, Hoban Cards is where you go for the unique and classy alternative to conventional, mass-produced, soulless business cards. Best of all, use ‘MacSparky’ to get $10 off any order. Get yours today.

SaneBox — Rescuing Treasure from Spam (Sponsor)

Spam folders are great—until they are not. If your email client/service decides to start throwing important email into the spam folder, then you’ve got trouble. I had that happen with some customer support emails a few months ago. So I went looking for way to stop an overly aggressive spam filter from upsetting customers without giving up on spam filters entirely.

The solution was with this week’s sponsor, SaneBox. SaneBox adds a pile of email features to your email, no matter what email service you use or what email app you choose. One of those features is the SaneNotSpam folder.

When your @SaneNotSpam folder is enabled, SaneBox constantly monitors your spam folder, looking for emails that might be inbox-worthy. When SaneBox finds one, it is moved into your SaneNotSpam folder. This means that either the person it was sent by or the service that was sending it was considered by the SaneBox algorithms to be normally inbox-worthy. Either way, it lets me find important email without digging through my spam folder.

There are so many more features you get with SaneBox:

  • Wake up every day to find the SaneBox robots have automatically sorted your incoming email for you so you can address the important and ignore the irrelevant.

  • Defer email for hours, days, or weeks, so it is out of your life until a more appropriate time. They’ve even added a new feature that can optionally auto-reply to snoozed email with something like, “I’m sorry, but I’m underwater right now. I’ll get back to you in a few days.”

  • Set secret reminders so if someone doesn’t reply to an important email, SaneBox gives you a nudge to follow up.

  • Automatically save attachments to the cloud (like Dropbox).

  • Use their SaneForward service to automatically send appropriate emails to services like Evernote, Expensify, and Kayak.

  • Move unwanted email to the SaneBlackHole and never see anything from that person again.

The list goes on, and MacSparky readers love this service. Why not straighten out your email by getting a SaneBox account today? If you sign up with this link, you even get a discount on your subscription.

Take Everlasting Notes with The Archive 

This week, MacSparky is sponsored by The Archive, a plain text editor for interconnected notes that last a lifetime Text files are probably the best way to make sure your words will still be decipherable by a computer in 100 years. (Seriously, if I gave you a MacWrite file right now, would your Mac have any chance at reading it?) Plain text is universal, portable, and permanent. 

The Archive gives you the convenience of plain text files along with an app full of beautiful themes and Markdown syntax highlighting. As the name implies, The Archive is a note-taking app with easy storage so you can organize your notes how you want and write in an efficient editor environment that doesn’t get in the way. You can transform it into a distraction-free full-screen writing environment, including typewriter scrolling. And best of all, all of your data is, ultimately, plain text and absolutely portable. You can sync your notes across different Macs seamlessly via iCloud, Google Drive, Dropbox, and the like.

In addition to storing notes, The Archive facilitates creative work with your notes through cross-connections, clickable links and hashtags. The term Zettelkasten is getting thrown around a lot these days among folks interested in getting focused. The Archive was designed around the concept with cross linking by making links between notes super easy. You can start feeding The Archive with ideas, and then build a second brain to help with your thinking in the long term. I’ve been playing with it and this stuff works.

The Archive is now two years and is being used for everything from taking college lecture notes to writing books and mapping complex fields of knowledge. The dedicated community produces a ton of custom Keyboard Maestro macros and Alfred workflows to add even more features to the workflow. All thanks to the open nature of The Archive and the plain text storage!

So my congratulations to The Archive for its first two years and my thanks for sponsoring MacSparky this week. Go check out The Archive.

SaneBox for Email Disruption in Any Email Client (Sponsor)

There is a lot of talk lately about email disruption and tools to let you deal with email on your terms. I have to smile when I see this because I took control of email years ago when I signed up for SaneBox, this week’s sponsor. I use SaneBox every day to manage my email. SaneBox acts as your email assistant, sorting your inbox for you, so you only see the most important emails with less important emails relegated to other mailboxes for later.

I’m not the only one who relies on SaneBox. It is also used by companies like eBay, Coca-Cola, adidas, and LinkedIn to help their employees stay on top of the most important email.

SaneBox has many additional features, like the ability to track and notify you if people don’t respond to your email and defer incoming email until later. It serves as a set of power tools to make every aspect of using email easier, and it works with just about any email platform including iCloud, IMAP, Google, and Exchange. No matter what system, platform, or app you use for email, SaneBox can help. It is like a feature upgrade to every email application. If you would like to become the boss of your email, sign up for a free SaneBox trial today and use the links in this post to get a significant discount when you sign up.

Work Smarter, Not Harder with TextExpander (Sponsor)

I love it when tools I use every day want to sponsor MacSparky.com. A case in point is this week’s sponsor, TextExpander. I use that application every day. I am currently working on a complicated transaction where we have a pile of exhibits, all with absolutely crazy names. So I made quick TextExpander snippet to rename the files. It inserts the date, puts in a transaction code, and even moves the curser to exactly the right place for me to type in a brief description. It took me about a minute to make the snippet and it saved me at least an hour. Just another day with TextExpander.

TextExpander makes you more productive. With the ability to add tokens for dates, get fill-ins from the user, and even run AppleScript, it is way more powerful than you’d think. With TextExpander you’ll see your snippets everywhere. It syncs between your Mac, iPhone, iPad, and Windows PC instantly.

They’ve got free snippet groups for all sorts of folks including job recruiters, freelancers, airport codes, brand names, and more at the TextExpander website (or you can download some of mine).

TextExpander even lets you run AppleScripts. For example, I use TextExpander to auto address emails with Apple Mail.

Best of all, with TextExpander you don’t have to work alone: TextExpander for Teams lets you manage and share snippets with your coworkers or the entire company. Use this link to get 20% off

Get More Productive with Tomato 2 (Sponsor) 


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The reason the Pomodoro Technique is so popular is because it takes almost no effort to implement and immediately delivers real productivity. If you’re going to use the Pomodoro Technique on your Mac, I recommend Tomato 2, this week’s sponsor. Just like the Pomodoro Technique itself, Tomato 2 is easy to use and delivers immediate results.

What I like about Tomato 2 is the way it remains simple but adds flexibility. Pomodoro Technique purists insist you need to work in 25-minute bursts, but I prefer 45-minute bursts. Tomato 2 can do that. Tomato 2 also gives you feedback about how many Pomodoro sessions you finished charted out over your week.

Need a little help resisting distractions? Tomato 2 can also block those websites that get in the way of your productivity. I’ve tried several Pomodoro apps over the years, and Tomato 2 is the best I’ve ever used. Check it out.


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Stand Out with Hoban Cards (Sponsor)

Your business card says a lot about you. To me, it tells me how much you care about the little things, and that, in turn, tells me how you care about the big things. I recently had a lawyer give me his card. It was a cut piece of laser printer paper, and I thought to myself . “huh?”. It wasn’t a good “huh”. Don’t be that guy. Why not carry a business card that genuinely makes you stand out? This week, MacSparky is sponsored by Hoban Cards, where they use a 1902 letterpress machine to make cards that your colleagues, clients, and customers will never forget. I sure love mine. Forget laser printers. Watch the Hoban letterpress process in action.

Evan and the gang at Hoban Cards are entirely dedicated to making the best possible calling cards. They have some beautiful templates to choose from, or you can roll your own.

There is no doubt I am a geek, but I have to admit that I love handing out letterpress cards. It is always a conversation starter. Put simply, Hoban Cards is where you go for the unique and classy alternative to conventional, mass-produced, soulless business cards. Best of all, use ‘MacSparky’ to get $10 off any order. I’ve been carrying Hoban cards for years and I intend to keep carrying them for the duration. You should too.

Get Accurate Time Tracking with Timing (Sponsor)


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A lot of folks are waking up to the fact that accurate time tracking can make a huge difference in your ability to get your most important priorities done and not waste a bunch of your time. The trick, however, comes with that word *accuracy*. For time tracking to work, the data must be accurate, and systems that require you to manually throw a switch every time you context shift are just not going to give you the data you need.

Enter Timing.

Timing automatically tracks which apps, documents, and websites you use — without start/stop timers. See how you spend your time, eliminate distracting activities, and improve your client billing. It’s like Screen Time on steroids.

Timing lets you stop worrying about time and focus on doing your best work instead. Timing also offers a web app to track time from anywhere, not to mention the ability to seamlessly sync data across all your Macs.

The Timing team even offers a set of Siri shortcuts to start and stop timers as quickly as possible. And if you spend a lot of time in meetings, you will be delighted by Timing’s ability to record time for calendar events with a single click. There’s even a third-party app, Zeit,  for iPhone that can update your Timing data from your phone.

Once you know precisely how you’re spending your time, first, you’ll be surprised, and then you’ll start making changes to be more productive. Timing helps you get started. 

Check out the videos I made on timing to help you get started and go download the free 14-day trial today and get 10% off for the first year!