Create projects, categorize them by clients, create tasks on projects, and assign them to your team. Then, all your employees have to do is choose a project/task and start the timer (plus provide a free-form description of what they're doing, if needed).

Your team can start a timer via web, desktop, and mobile app to track time. Clocking-in and clocking-out can also be automated so the timer automatically starts and ends when they turn on the browser.


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If you're adding manual time directly to your contract on Upwork they will be listed under your Work Diary. However, I would recommend to track your time with our Desktop when you're working on hourly contracts.

Why don't you use the Upwork tracker to properly track your hours? Manual time and any outside tracker are not protected and you may not get paid. If you want your income to be protected, you should use the Upwork tracker.

You will have no payment protection for work time not tracked properly using TimeTracker, so the client can not pay you for some or all of any particular work segment and you will have no recourse to get payment under Upwork's rules. Your client may or may not know that.

If you do run the two timetracking apps in parallel, try to start and end each work session precisely at the beginning and end of one of the six 10-minutes segments of each hour. (For example, start work at 3:10 and end it at 4:20. Don't start tracking your work segment at 3:08 and end it at 4:22)

Upwork's TimeTracker works in fixed 10-minute segments, regardless of the actual start and end times of a work segment. You don't want your client to compare his time tracking app's records and seeing different work segments than TimeTracker has tracked.

Fallout from the temporal distortions has now reached Gallifrey. To find the cause, Leela and Romana remember travels with the Fourth Doctor to the same world, at different times. The enemy is revealed, and it may take more than one Doctor to prevent the destruction of everything!

I am a freelancer and one of my clients requested I use Time Doctor. I downloaded the Time Doctor app and the automation for Time Doctor automatically appeared on my Trello cards. That's fine. However, anytime I open Trello, it automatically begins tracking time on Time Doctor for this specific client regardless of which card I open.

In the episode, alien time traveller the Doctor (Matt Smith) is going on a "farewell tour" before his impending death and visits his friend Craig Owens (James Corden) in present-day Colchester, who has a new baby son, Alfie. Though not initially intending to stay, the Doctor becomes intrigued by a Cybermen invasion at a local department store.

Two hundred years have passed for the Doctor since the events of "The God Complex", taking him to the age his older self was in "The Impossible Astronaut". He spent this time "waving through time" at Amy and Rory, which is seen at the beginning of "The Impossible Astronaut".[3] The Doctor takes the blue envelopes he uses to summon his companions from Craig's flat and Craig gives him the Stetson he wears at the start of "The Impossible Astronaut".[2][4][5] From River Song's perspective, the final scene takes place immediately before the picnic in "The Impossible Astronaut", and she is confirmed to have been that episode's eponymous astronaut.[5]

Cybermats are shown for the first time in the revived series.[2] In the classic series, they appeared in The Tomb of the Cybermen (1967), The Wheel in Space (1968), and Revenge of the Cybermen (1975).[4] The Doctor examines a toy and remarks, "Robot dog; not as much fun as I remember," alluding to K-9, a robot dog who accompanied the Fourth Doctor.[4] The Doctor claims to be able to "speak 'baby'", as he did in "A Good Man Goes to War". The Doctor expresses his dislike for Craig's "redecorated" house by using a line from the Second Doctor (Patrick Troughton) in The Three Doctors (1973)[6] and The Five Doctors (1983).[7] The Doctor recites the mini-poem "Not a rat, a cybermat" from the novelisation of Revenge of the Cybermen.[2][8]

Much of "Closing Time" was filmed in Howells department store in Cardiff. As the store had to be closed, they filmed over four or five nights, sometimes going until 6:00 in the morning. Hughes said it was a "drain" on the production team, while Corden recalled it made the cast and crew "lightheaded" and "hysterical".[10] Reportedly, the department store scenes were shot in March 2011.[13] The rest of the episode was filmed in a private home in Cardiff; the couple who owned the house allowed the filming to take place in order for it to be an experience for their two young boys. Production at the house also went into the early hours of the morning. The window of the sliding door in the house that the Doctor jumps through to save Craig from the Cybermat was too small, so the production team built another one. The new door was too big for shatterglass; instead, glass that breaks into chunks was used, wired with a small explosive that would crack the glass when Matt Smith's stuntman jumped through it. Hughes wanted it to look as if the audience was crashing through the window with the Doctor; he spliced together shots of Smith filmed running up to the door, the stuntman jumping through it, and Smith landing with shards of glass thrown over him.[10]

"Closing Time" was first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 24 September 2011,[17] and in the United States on BBC America.[18] It achieved overnight ratings of 5.3 million viewers, coming in second for its time slot behind All-Star Family Fortunes.[19] When final consolidated figures were taken into account, the number rose to 6.93 million, making it the second most watched programme of the day behind The X Factor.[20] "Closing Time" was the fifth most-downloaded programme of September on BBC's online iPlayer.[21] It was also given an Appreciation Index of 86, considered "excellent".[22]

Time Doctor targets a broad range of time tracking customers, from freelancers running an operation of one person to software engineers at large corporations such as Apple and Verizon. To help that mission, it offers additional features across project management (PM) as well as employee monitoring. From the perspective of time tracking, however, while it was one of our better contenders, a clunky user interface (UI) and some usability issues keep it behind our Editors' Choice winners TSheets and Zoho Projects in our time tracking software review roundup.

Time Doctor's introductory plan lacks access to the reporting and employee monitoring that you'll find on paid plans. You'll be able to use the desktop application only to track tasks and work hours but nothing else. A free plan that kicks in after the 14-day trial is over provides access to time tracking through the desktop app but no features available in the web app like reporting. When you create an account and invite new users, you'll be prompted to download the desktop app. If you decide to upgrade to the paid version, you'll find it's refreshingly simple: $9.99 per user per month. That's it. No other plans or tiers, just a per-user-per-month number for as many users as you'd like.

Time Doctor's closest comparison is Hubstaff, which also offers a limited free plan and a Basic $5-per-month plan that gives you access to simple time tracking tools, an employee payment schedule manager, 24/7 support, granular user settings, and employee monitoring features. Hubstaff's $9-per-user-per-month Premium plan also provides access to an API, Hubstaff's scheduling tool, invoice creation, and automatic PayPal payments.

The project management solutions we mentioned previously will cost a lot more per month, but you'll be given access to a wide array of features such as cloud-based file sharing, task management delegation, project analysis, expense reporting, budget forecasting, invoicing, payments, tracking billable hours, and projections for future staffing needs. These tools will cost, at minimum, $25 per month when time tracking is included.

To take full advantage of all that Time Doctor has to offer, you'll need to download and install the desktop app or add a Chrome extension, which is a bit of a drag. Within the desktop app, you begin tracking time by typing in the task on which you're currently working and pressing Play. This will automatically start tracking time and monitoring your behavior while you're on the clock. The Administrative dashboard, which is only accessible via the web-based client, shows how many hours employees have worked as well as the tasks to which they're assigned.

Administrators can click into a time period to see what employees were looking at, if they signed in late, and if they were idle for certain periods of time. Similar to Hubstaff, which also monitors employee activity, the desktop app tracks webpages visited, keystrokes, and apps used. It can even take screengrabs and snap photos from your webcam. This is a great feature for Big Brother-level oversight, but it makes using the tool a bit annoying because you'll need to flip from desktop app to web-based app if you're a user as well as an admin (or you'll be forced to use Chrome, which isn't the worst thing in the world but still an annoyance).

Time Doctor's data entry is broken down by projects or departments depending on how you plan to use the tool, and then is broken down by tasks within the given project or department. The software lets you set up permanent tasks that will always live on your dashboard. You access these tasks by clicking on the infinity symbol icon. This is beneficial for companies whose employees perform repetitive tasks and don't want to go into the system to create new tasks each time they want to be tracked.

The application can track any data entered into the software and pull it into any report you create by using its seven pre-built reports. Time Doctor even provides a "Poor Time Use" report that tracks how much time your employees spend on social media, news websites, or any other websites you deem off-limits. Unfortunately, this feature won't tell you if employees were doing something productive on another screen, so employees who like to listen to the news while performing data entry will be logged as time-wasters even though they still got their jobs done. Time Doctor didn't give me a list of all the websites it deems as time-wasting ones, but it did list Facebook and YouTube in my test account. If you want to micro-manage your micro-management capabilities, then you can submit a list of time-wasting websites to Time Doctor and the company will make this harsh system even harsher. To protect employees, whenever someone clicks on a "Poor Time Use" website, a pop-up message will appear asking if he or she really wants to watch the video or go to that webpage. e24fc04721

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