Maigo Erit is the open-source alias of developer MayGo, whose single public offering, Tockler, quietly sits on users’ taskbars and turns raw desktop activity into an intelligible timeline. Written in Electron and React, the utility records nothing more intrusive than window titles and idle seconds, then stitches that sparse data into color-coded ribbons that reveal exactly how the day was parcelled out among editors, browsers, chat apps and meetings. Project managers use it to invoice clients with second-level accuracy; students rely on its gentle idle reminders to pull attention back to coursework; productivity hobbyists export JSON or CSV feeds to build personal “time budgets” in Excel or Grafana. Because the entire database is local and encrypted, privacy-minded freelancers can run it on air-gapped machines, while enterprise tinkerers fork the GPLv3 code to add Jira or Toggl sync. Night-shift coders appreciate the dark-theme timeline, and open-source contributors value the headless mode that lets the tracker run on CI boxes to measure how long builds really take. The publisher’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always install the latest release, and can be queued for batch deployment alongside other applications.

Tockler

tracks your time by monitoring your active windows (only titles) and idle time.

Details