Time Cop vs Yeeemp
Side-by-side comparison of two open source alternatives
Time Cop
- Offline-only, mobile-first - For Android, iOS, and Linux - Fully private—there is no tracking / spying / advertising / etc - Keep track of tasks with multiple parallel timers that can be started with the tap of a button - Associate timers with projects to group your work (or don't) - Start, stop, edit, and delete timers whenever with no fuss - Export data as a .csv file, filtered by time-spans and projects - Export the app's database for full access to all of its data - Automatic light mode / dark mode based on your device settings - Localized in several languages (thanks to Google Translate): English, Arabic, German, Spanish, French, Hindi, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, Chinese (Simplified), and Chinese (Traditional), as well as Italian, Czech, Norwegian, and Indonesian (via contributors) - Open source (licensed under Apache-2.0)—fork away (https://github.com/hamaluik/timecop)
Yeeemp
Yeeemp — simple tag-based event tracker used to keep track of things you do and experience. You can make different queues for movies, books, meals, or whatever you want to track. Features: - Multiple Queues: Organize events into different queues. - Detailed Records: Add tags, descriptions, and a date for each event. - Privacy Focused: Your data stays on your device. - Backup & Restore: Easily save and restore your data from a backup file.
| Feature | Time Cop | Yeeemp |
|---|---|---|
| License | Apache-2.0 | AGPL-3.0-or-later |
| Install sources | F-DroidGitHub | F-DroidGitHub |
| Categories | Calendar | ProductivityFitnessCalendar |
| Features | Ad-FreeOpen SourceNo Tracking | Ad-FreeOpen SourceNo Tracking |
| Platforms | Android | Android |
| Website | ||
| Source code |