Monday, July 27, 2009

New logo competition

What's this about?

I know some of you have not been entirely happy with my choice of logo so far and I've heard you. As a result, I've created a competition for a new logo on crowdSPRING. What is cool about it is that all of the design takes place as a competition, so you can choose the best one.

The competition is here: http://bit.ly/ihfVC

What can I do?
  • Comment here on which one you like best
  • Leave a comment on crowdSPRING (will require registration) - This way, the designer can get your feedback.
  • If you are a graphic designer or know one and want to make some money, submit a logo!
Note that the competition will run until next Saturday or Sunday after which I can make a final decision. As today was the first day, there have only been two submissions so far, but feel free to take a look!

Why?

I think this is probably the one thing people have been most vocal about publicly and privately! I'm happy to give you an avenue to choose the route that will make your life a bit easier :-)

And if I don't care?

Don't say I didn't warn you!

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

New release (1.0.1111)

A new release is available to fix a crash caused as a result of a fix (doh.) If you tried to use the "toggle timer" action with an issue selected, you would experience this problem. Thanks to user Geoff for pointing it out and verifying that the fix worked for him. Note that the beta site has not been updated with this change yet.

Sorry for any inconvenience!

Sunday, July 19, 2009

New release (1.0.1108)

A new release of Worklog Assistant is available. There are two major changes in this release. The first major change relates to when you are time tracking against an issue in JIRA and are interrupted, perhaps for a meeting or a short break. The second is to do with easier searching.

Previously, Worklog Assistant would happily track the time against the JIRA issue when you left your desk. That would still result in accurate timing when you are trying to look at the "average time to close", for example. However, some practices might require the user to book this time separately.

Enter "idle time detection."

Now, when you are away from your desk for a configurable amount of time (default is 10 minutes), Worklog Assistant stops tracking against the active JIRA issue and tracks how long you have been away. Upon your return, you are prompted to book the away time to a specific JIRA issue. You can see how this works in the sequence of screenshots found in the documentation.

The second major change is to do with the ability to create an ad-hoc filter by replacing the "other issues" field with a field that will search JIRA for issue keys as well as text searches. You can see this field in action in the screenshot below, along with the tooltip help:


In addition to these two feature changes, there have been numerous minor bug fixes along with a couple of serious ones for Mac. I hope you enjoy these changes and please let me know if you have any comments/issues about these or any other features.

Have a good week and happy time tracking!

About this blog

We strongly believe that tracking your time properly is the first step to deterministic software development. If you feel that you have been guessing or you can't be bothered to remember to log time, Worklog Assistant might be for you!

Give it a try!

Please download a free 30-day trial today by clicking on the link below: Download