Eternity 1.6.1 is available on App Store with the following new features:
Favorites/Recents
Activities color coding
Automatic seconds rounding
Custom reports
Per report row log entries listing
Native email client support for reports exporting and feedback
Logs presentation ordering
Landscape mode support for notes editing
Favorites/Recents
You can add activities to Favorites when editing them, you can add from the Favorites edit screen. You can also auto-generate your Favorites list from the top 10 most frequently used activities in the last 7 days. Our lifes are usually structured around weekly rhythm so I think it makes sense. If you add manually you’re free to add as many as you like, of course, and reorder to your taste.
Recents list is generated automatically from the 10 recently started timers. I hope it’s a nice addition to the Favorites.
This way you can have deep hierarchies and still have quick access to the ones you choose, use most and used recently. Favorites auto-generation is an easy way to refresh the list when your activity patterns change over time.
Eternity remembers which of the Activities/Favorites/Recents you used before exiting the app and will show it automatically when you open it again. Just to save you some seconds when you’re in a rush :) It does not apply to Logs, Reports and Settings screen however. I assume that what you want to do quickly after opening the app is to start or stop a timer. If you want to analyze logs or reports, you probably have some extra seconds for it ;)
Activities color coding
When editing activity, you can now assign a color. It will be used on all activities list and on pie charts. It should make it easier for you to highlight some of your activities on the lists and find them. Colors are now also consistently shown on pie charts. Whether an acivity has a color assigned explicitely by you, or not, it will not change when you navigate pie charts (shift or change presented interval). That was a main complain related to charts so now it’s gone too ;)
Automatic seconds rounding
If you like your log entries to be nice and round now Eternity can make them so for you automatically :) As long as a timer goes, it will be exact to a second. Once it’s stopped, seconds will be rounded.
Example: projectA started: 08:10:23 stopped: 08:15:46 will be rounded to 08:10:00 – 08:15:00 after the timer is stopped. The only exception is when the entry is started and stopped the same minute: projectB 08:20:15 – 08:20:44 will be rounded to 08:20:00 – 08:21:00.
Start time for in progress timer is not rounded on start so you don’t jump with “Gee, I’m 44s behind!” when starting something at 08:30:44 ;)
This feature is disabled by default and can be enabled on Settings.
Custom reports
This feature is only available in the paid version. You can access it from Reports>Top-right icon>Custom report. Just select any date range and a report will be generated for it. You can go back and forth using arrow buttons besides the date button and the interval will be shifted by the amount of days in your original cutom report. Change dates by tapping on the date button. Easily go back to the last shown daily/weekly/monthly report by tapping on the button at the top. You can of course see a pie chart for a custom report by turning your iPod/iPhone to landscape position.
Per report row log entries listing
Tapping on a report row, presents a list of all log entries related to given activity hierarchy and time interval. To change hierarchy level you now tap on a (>) button in a given report row.
Native email client support for reports exporting and feedback (iPhone OS >= 3.0)
Eternity now supports native email client interface on devices with iPhone OS >= 3.0. Up to 1.6 update Eternity used my server to format and send emails since 3rd party apps on iPhone OS < 3.0 could not send emails with attachments. This had its drawbacks: if server was down, you could not send report, some email servers have black and white lists for incoming email servers because of spam. Now you can edit email content and send emails using native iPhone email client and email servers you have defined on it. No single point of failure, more power to the users.
Logs presentation ordering (earliest/latest first)
Some users like to have their logs presented earliest first, some latest first. The best approach – make it configurable. Now you can change it with tapping on one button and Eternity will remember it. This applies to “Insert/delete” mode also. The “Earliest/Latest first” presents action, not state (so it tells you what will actually happen when you tap, not what the current mode is). It’s always a tricky choice, but just to make it consistent with the “Insert/delete button”, which obviously must be action oriented, I decided for it.
Landscape mode support for notes editing
This will be a welcomed addition for heavy noters, I hope :) There had been some troubles in 1.6 related to device orientation handling and disappearing keyboard but they were solved by 1.6.1 bugfix update.
What’s not in the update?
Initially I wanted to include calendar-like logs presentation in this update. It would be pinch-zoomable, touch-adjustable and absolutely fantastic in any way you can imagine ;) It worked beautifully! But only on an iPhone Simulator, on my MacBook  :-(. On real devices there were graphical glitches and artifacts which would not be acceptable in a final product. I invested quite a lot of time implementing it but was forced to put it on a back burner just to push this update out the door. But I will get back to it!
That’s all folks :) . Big THANK YOU to all users who provided feedback and helped in testing! Enjoy :) .

Eternity 1.7 is available on App Store with the following new features:

Log entry tagging

Log entry tagging adds another level of flexibility to time tracking and reporting. In addition to defining any activities hierarchy you like, you can now also tag your log entries across hierarchies. Tags are not only notes on steroids for repeatable texts but also work with report filters (new in 1.7) for advanced and flexible reports.

So now you have activities hierarchy for general structure, tags for cross-hierarchy classification and reports with filers to make it all work together.

eternity tags - timer screen eternity tags assign

Tags are accessible in two ways. You can add and assign tags to any individual log entry from a timer screen or log entry edit screen…

eternity tags - edit eternity tags - rename

…or you can go to “More tab”->Tags to add, rename or delete any tag. If you try to delete a tag that is assigned to an entry, you’ll get a warning.

eternity tags - search and add

To add a new tag, just tap on the search bar, start typing and you’ll get search results based on the “Starts with”, “Contains” or “Ends with” criteria. If you find the desired tag, use it. If you don’t, add it.

Searching works this way for selecting/unselecting, deleting and renaming as well. Just start typing and work with the search results.

Log entry continue with note & tags

eternity log entry continue from timer eternity log entry continue

Since now you can have notes and tags assigned to your entries, you can reuse them to continue your activities without re-entering the same data. If the last entry on the timer screen had a note or tags assigned you can tap “Continue” to run a new timer with this info assigned or “Start” to run a fresh one without note and tags. You can also do that from any log entry on Logs tab.

Report filters

Filters are menat to add more flexibility to report generation. They can also let you learn about your daily habits and patterns.

eternity filters eternity filters report

You can define your report filters on Reports->top-right-icon->Filters. You can give a filter a descriptive name like “Weekend work”, “Workday evenings” or “Projects – design”. There are 4 filtering criteria to choose from: activities, tags, weekdays and hour ranges. You can enable/disable each individual criteria or make it inclusive or exclusive any time. Once you apply a filter, it’s shown as the first row in the report. Tap on the filter row to select another one or tap (>) to modify the filtering criteria.

eternity filters criteria eternity filters activities

Defining criteria should be really straightforward.

Example 1 “Weekend work”: activities – include “work”; weekdays – include Saturday and Sunday.

Example 2 “Weekday evenings”: weekdays – exclude  Saturday and Sunday; hours – include 6:00 pm – 00:00 am.

Example 3 “Projects – design”: tags – include any tag: design

You can modify this of course. Like excluding sleep activity in Example 2.

WiFi backup

Eternity database is backed up every time your backup your device in iTunes. You can restore from itunes backup and Eternity data will be restored as well. But restoring the whole device is not always convenient. For example when you want to restore your device to a clean, fresh OS installation or just move Eternity data from one device to another. WiFi backup and restore can help you in such situation. You’ll need your device connected to a local WiFi network and a PC or Mac with a web browser.

eternity backup

To backup or restore your data go to More->Bakcup and tap the Backup button.

eternity backup eternity restore

Tap on Backup and Eternity will prepare a backup file and let you know when it’s ready for download. Open a browser on your PC/Mac, type the address and click the backup link to download the file.

Similarly, when you want to restore from backup, go to More->Backup and tap Restore. Type the address in your browser and follow the instructions to upload the backup file to restore from. Once uploaded, the file will be verified on your device and you’ll be asked for final confirmation.

Don’t close the screen or lock your device during the backup/restore operations.

The backup mechanism uses port 27000 for Eternity<->web browser communication. If you have any problems accessing the backup page in the browser, please make sure you have this port open in your PC/Mac firewall.

Support for iOS 4, retina display and other minor improvements

Eternity 1.7 adds support for iOS 4.0 Fast App Switching and it has updated artwork to look better on your iPhone 4 retina display. There are also some small improvements in log entry editing and report generation.

Enjoy :) .

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Eternity 1.6.1 is available on App Store with the following new features:

Favorites/Recents

favorites_1.6 favorites_edit_1.6

You can add activities to Favorites when editing them, you can add from the Favorites edit screen. You can also auto-generate your Favorites list from the top 10 most frequently used activities in the last 7 days. Our lifes are usually structured around weekly rhythm so I think it makes sense. If you add manually you’re free to add as many as you like, of course, and reorder to your taste.

recents_1.6

Recents list is generated automatically from the 10 recently started timers. I hope it’s a nice addition to the Favorites.

This way you can have deep hierarchies and still have quick access to the ones you choose, use most and used recently. Favorites auto-generation is an easy way to refresh the list when your activity patterns change over time.

Eternity remembers which of the Activities/Favorites/Recents you used before exiting the app and will show it automatically when you open it again. Just to save you some seconds when you’re in a rush :) It does not apply to Logs, Reports and Settings screen however. I assume that what you want to do quickly after opening the app is to start or stop a timer. If you want to analyze logs or reports, you probably have some extra seconds for it ;)

Activities color coding

color-coding_1.6_1 color-coding_1.6_2

When editing activity, you can now assign a color. It will be used on all activities list and on pie charts. It should make it easier for you to highlight some of your activities on the lists and find them. Colors are now also consistently shown on pie charts. Whether an acivity has a color assigned explicitely by you, or not, it will not change when you navigate pie charts (shift or change presented interval). That was a main complain related to charts so now it’s gone too ;)

Automatic seconds rounding

seconds_rounding

If you like your log entries to be nice and round now Eternity can make them so for you automatically :) As long as a timer goes, it will be exact to a second. Once it’s stopped, seconds will be rounded.

Example: projectA started: 08:10:23 stopped: 08:15:46 will be rounded to 08:10:00 – 08:15:00 after the timer is stopped. The only exception is when the entry is started and stopped the same minute: projectB 08:20:15 – 08:20:44 will be rounded to 08:20:00 – 08:21:00.
Start time for in progress timer is not rounded on start so you don’t jump with “Gee, I’m 44s behind!” when starting something at 08:30:44 ;)

This feature is disabled by default and can be enabled on Settings.

Custom reports

custom_reports_1.6_2 custom_reports_1.6_3

This feature is only available in the paid version. You can access it from Reports>Top-right icon>Custom report. Just select any date range and a report will be generated for it. You can go back and forth using arrow buttons besides the date button and the interval will be shifted by the amount of days in your original cutom report. Change dates by tapping on the date button. Easily go back to the last shown daily/weekly/monthly report by tapping on the button at the top. You can of course see a pie chart for a custom report by turning your iPod/iPhone to landscape position.

Per report row log entries listing

per-report-row-logs

Tapping on a report row, presents a list of all log entries related to given activity hierarchy and time interval. To change hierarchy level you now tap on a (>) button in a given report row.

Native email client support for reports exporting and feedback (iPhone OS >= 3.0)

Eternity now supports native email client interface on devices with iPhone OS >= 3.0. Up to 1.6 update Eternity used my server to format and send emails since 3rd party apps on iPhone OS < 3.0 could not send emails with attachments. This had its drawbacks: if server was down, you could not send report, some email servers have black and white lists for incoming email servers because of spam. Now you can edit email content and send emails using native iPhone email client and email servers you have defined on it. No single point of failure, more power to the users.

Logs presentation ordering (earliest/latest first)

logs_ordering_1.6

Some users like to have their logs presented earliest first, some latest first. The best approach – make it configurable. Now you can change it with tapping on one button and Eternity will remember it. This applies to “Insert/delete” mode also. The “Earliest/Latest first” presents action, not state (so it tells you what will actually happen when you tap, not what the current mode is). It’s always a tricky choice, but just to make it consistent with the “Insert/delete button”, which obviously must be action oriented, I decided for it.

Landscape mode support for notes editing

landscape_notes

This will be a welcomed addition for heavy noters, I hope :) There had been some troubles in 1.6 related to device orientation handling and disappearing keyboard but they were solved by 1.6.1 bugfix update.

What’s not in the update?

Initially I wanted to include calendar-like logs presentation in this update. It would be pinch-zoomable, touch-adjustable and absolutely fantastic in any way you can imagine ;) It worked beautifully! But only on an iPhone Simulator, on my MacBook  :-( . On real devices there were graphical glitches and artifacts which would not be acceptable in a final product. I invested quite a lot of time implementing it but was forced to put it on a back burner just to push this update out the door. But I will get back to it!

That’s all folks :) . Big THANK YOU to all users who provided feedback and helped in testing! Enjoy :) .

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That’s it! It’s been a year since Eternity debuted on App Store. For 4.99$. So, to celebrate that, it’s available for 4.99$ again! Until Monday , November 23.

When I first saw it, it was so cute and helpless. It had only 3 tabs, no data export, no settings, no charts… The time. It goes by so fast (gasp) …. ;)

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This is business of course – no reason to pretend it’s not. BUT, with a bit of personal touch ;)

Don’t wait for the next sale. Omne trinum perfectum :)

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I’m back from vacation (since about a week :) ). Eternity 1.5.1 is available on App Store with some bugfixes and the much requested activities hierarchy reorganization feature.

Update 1.5.2 has been just submitted to Apple for review with one bugfix: duplicate entries when re-editing a newly added activity. This a nasty bug that’s probably visible to many first time users, since they likely add and modify activities a lot at the beginning. I’m not comfortable with bothering Apple reviewers with a one-bugfix update, but what can I do, more nasty bugs?

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Today I’m going on a short vacation. This will be my first vacation as a self-employed employee :) . My boss had objections, but he agreed eventually when I promised I’ll be checking email regularly ;) .

To celebrate that a bit and let my customers celebrate too I decided to offer Eternity for half the price until I’m back :-P ! If you considered a fresh purchase or an upgrade from Lite version this may be a good reason to go ahead with it now.

BTW. Update 1.5.1 has been just submitted to Apple for review. As a minor update it contains some bugfixes and stability improvements. However I managed to include one much requested feature: moving activities across hierarchies. I hope it will be out around the time I’m back from my trip.

Enjoy :-P !

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Summary of changes

Update 1.5 contains the following improvements:

Below you can find more extensive description…

ChartFlow – navigable pie charts for reports (full version only)

200909071242.jpg

Pie charts for reports can be displayed by tapping on the top-left button or by rotating iPhone/iPod to landscape position on Reports view. You can go back to reports table by changing device orientation to portrait mode. Charts represent times in the same way as you have them configured for reports table (against, interval, total time, parent).

200909071243.jpg

So you can go back and forth just by rotating your iPhone/iPod. But I’ve added the chart button for the sake of discoverability. To avoid angry emails (”You promised pie charts! Well, where the frig are they?!!!”) and for users who don’t really have time to check what’s new in the latest update :) . The spot was free anyway, so why not use it.

But the chart itself is not all. You can go to chart for previous/next interval by swiping right and left. You can also switch between daily/weekly and monthly modes by swiping up and down. And when you go back to Reports table, it’s in sync with your last chart. Cool, isn’t it :) ?

For those who don’t have time to read silly blogs, there are instructions under the ‘i’ button.

200909071244.jpg

Why pie charts? It wasn’t the most requested feature, but:

  • One picture is worth thousands of words. Many people (including me) digest data much easier when served as pictures, not text.
  • Many users exported data to spreadsheet just to make pie charts. Now they can use that time for something else :)
  • It’s an eye-candy and everybody loves eye-candy :) . After all, we bought our iPhones/iPods because they are nice and shiny, didn’t we (”Nope! Actually I’ve bought mine to develop life-changing apps bla, bla, bla” – yeah, sure
  • Pie charts are not rocket science really, but I had to learn some new iPhone development tricks to implement them. I also had to rewrite some reports-related code to make reports faster (you should generally notice that reports are calculated faster, export quicker and even scroll smoother now. Especially when you have data from many months). So there was a challenge and some new things to learn. Two most important ingredients of a fun project soup.
  • Developing Eternity I wanted to use standard GUI frameworks as much as possible. It makes development faster and the app consistent with iPhone user expectations. But the standard controls delivered by Apple frameworks, as nice as they are, have their limitations. It became obvious to me when I developed auto-adjustment functionality. The wheels-based time controls with separate, independent months, days, hours, minutes and AM/PM settings just don’t work very well in that context. I need to learn some lower-level tricks to go beyond standard controls in such cases and pie charts project was a good one to start from.
  • I don’t follow competition that much, but I hope it will differentiate my app a bit. When I first get requests for adding pie charts I was not convinced at all. “The report screen is crowded already. How do I present the data, the charts, the legend and all the controls.” (I’m not sure now, but I might have been influenced by a picture of another app I’ve had seen on App Store). But then I thought “Why not get rid of the legend, the controls and draw everything in landscape mode so there is more space for labels?”. Eureka (gee, it’s sad that I have to discover the obvious in such pains ;) ).

Easy date switching for logs and reports

200909071246.jpg 200909071246.jpg

This is a no-brainer. Interval labels are tappable now. I made them more button-like looking to make it discoverable. You can pick any date and switch to today with one tap.

Manual reordering of activities

200909071246.jpg

When you tap on Edit activities, the editable rows have standard reorder controls on the right side. You can also sort activities alphabetically with one tap.
In addition, activities editing/deleting/reordering can be cancelled now if you’ve done some mess. The ordering you set here is respected in reports too.

Text editing settings (capitalization, auto-correction) for activity names and notes

200909071247.jpg

Go to Settings->Text editing to switch auto-correction and capitalization ON or OFF for activity names and notes.

Easy data migration from Lite to full version

200909071234.jpg200909071234.jpg

Now you can upgrade from Lite to full version without loosing your data. In three easy steps:

  1. Install full version on the same device
  2. Open Lite version, go to Settings->Full version, tap on “Migrate data to full version”
  3. Full version is opened and asks for confirmation. Confirm.

Enjoy :) !

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The nicer part first: how to get 5 starts? This is not as tough as you may think. There are millions and millions of iPhone and iPod Touch users. They’ve downloaded over a billion apps so far. Looking at this numbers it’s pretty obvious that virtually every app will find someone who like it enough to give an enthusiastic review.

My app, Eternity, got it’s first 5-star review, the day it was published. Let me quote it here:

I am giving an enthusiastic 5-stars because I think this is totally worth many times the money with out any improvements at all. I use it as a constant (eternity) running time log even while I am sleeping. I have created categories some even with several layers of sub-categories ranging from Family and children, Business and Partners, Music and multiple instruments, Writing and several books, and Miscellaneous and multiple recurring categories. The reports allow me to know exactly where I spent my time in practice in the broader categories and be able to drill that down to the more refined specific area. I never stop the timer ever but rather just start the next one which auto stop the former even knowing exactly how long I sleep and when. I even created a “What next?” category in Miscellaneous that fills the gap when I don’t know what to do next. This is a self management and tracking system dream come true. Of course you can run other programs while Eternity is still running and yes I have some improvement ideas but somebody must have read my mind on exactly what I needed. I now know exactly where my time goes with as much detail as desired with the elegant simplicity of the iPhone touchscreen. WOW!

For me, the most pleasing part was the one where the user describes my app as his “dream come true” and projection of his mind. It’s a great compliment for a developer when a user concludes, that software does exactly what he wants.

This was a review of the 1.0 version of Eternity (the first iPhone app I’ve ever written). Lacking many features, very basic. Still, someone liked it very, very much. Not that hard, is it? Write an app, publish it, wait some time.

OK, now the harder part…

How to get a 1-star review on App Store?

The recipe for getting a 1-star review is very similar: write an app, publish it, wait enough time (Eternity waited almost 7 months). Given enough users and time, someone will be dissatisfied enough to voice his opinion.

This is even more true for free apps. People download them just to see what’s in or because they are bored and browse the App Store. If they don’t know what the free app really does, which is very common in case of niche apps, they will give it 1-star review just because of that.

The 1-start review for the paid version of Eternity was:

To have a logging application on a mobile device without a way to purge the data is crazy at best. This application will take up some space and you would have to remove log entries one by one!
Contacted developer and was told it would be in the next version. I have stopped using the application.

(it was subsequently updated by the user and the rating was increased to 2-starts).

I’ve had an email exchange with the author of the review before he published it. I explained that Eternity requires very little storage space (about 150KB after over half a year of 24/7 logging, fraction of the space used by an mp3 song). So my first reaction was: oh, this user probably doesn’t understand what kilobytes, megabytes and gigabytes are. Hence such review. So I explained it in more detail and assured that Eternity won’t consume a lot of storage even when the log is not purged for years.

It turned out that the author was a developer himself and he perfectly understood what KB, MB and GB are. So his review was very technically oriented. Every software collecting data should have a way to purge it somehow. It’s a “must have” from a technical point of view. And I agree!

Note however, that such review could be written by a non-technical user as well: It’s my little iPhone. There is no much space in it. Do you think you can eat and eat it forever? No way! ;)

So why Eternity didn’t have that feature right from the start? Well, that’s because I thought too technically developing it. It will take few hundreds of kilobytes after years of using, I have few months (at least) to develop data purging. Both technical and non-technical criticism of such approach is valid, however. It’s a bad practice not to have a way to delete data in a data-collecting software. It’s a bad practice to restrict user control (even a bit paranoid) over his mobile device.

What should you do now?

In my teen years, I was on a camp. When me or my fellows did not behave well, our instructor ordered us series of push-ups. After completing it, we had to say a simple formula: “thank you for improving my brawn!”.

So what should you do, as a developer and a micro-ISV owner, with a 1-star review? Well, you should accept the critique whether you think it’s fair or not. Say “thank you”. “The user is always right” should be your motto. Users have many expectations (sometimes contradictory), different views, requests, worries, but it’s always your job to reforge them into a robust shape of your product.

So the first thing I did was developing the “data purge” functionality (it waits for other features to join, before the next update is released). The second is writing this entry to document a bit harder part of “My micro-ISV way” ;) .

What to do to avoid 1-star reviews?

This can’t be said enough times: think like users think (or at least try to). That may be hard for several reasons, however.
First of all, there are many users and they, well…, “think different” :)
Second. You, as the developer, know your software inside out (yes, that’s a common illusion among developers, including me :) ). Because of that, what’s obvious to you, may be a mystery to the user. In a one-person company there are not many people to take a (blank) look at your creation :) . Before users do, of course.

Third. It’s hard to wear your “software engineer” and “average software user” hats at the same time. And you have to do that all the time. Do you think 256 is a nice, round number in the eyes of the user? Think again ;)

Looking at the 5-start reviews, I’ve had a bit of success in thinking like users do, but there are still many 1-start aspects of what I do. I’m aware of that.

What does it mean in a micro-ISV world?

Running a one-person company, you’re responsible for all the good as well as bad things. There are no layers of tier 1, 2 and 3 customer support between you and the end user of your products. Your praise is very public, but your shame too. That’s very different from a corporate software development world, as far as I know it.

BTW, that’s why I gave my company a name after one of my nicknames: Komorian. I wanted my business to a bit personal too. That and the lack of good, unregistered domain names :) . I know it’s lame (do you want to hear a lame company name? Stand up and say “Google” out loud :-P .

The conclusion of this story is that when you screw up in a micro-ISV, there is no-one else to blame. So be prepared to take the blame yourself. It may be tough, I know. But “this is the business we’ve chosen!”. Now, who said that? The first three readers sending good answers get a free copy of Eternity :) (via promo code – valid only in US App Store, sorry).

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200909041249.jpg

Where Eternity name and icon came from?

When I started developing Eternity Time Log, the first name for it was Hourglass (it’s still in many place in the source code). But before I released it in App Store, another time tracking app had showed up with a hourglass as the main theme for its icon. I had some hourglassy icon designs ready, but I decided to change the name of my app and the icon to something a bit more distinguishing. So you could tell your friend: “I got this cool app on my iPhone. It’s for time tracking (yeah I know, I’m a freak ;) ). But try it. It really makes a difference. Look for …”. And you would tell the name of the app or show the icon on your device and both would be easy to find. So I wanted something differentiating from other time tracking apps and time related at the same time (lot of “times” in this sentence:-P). “Eternity” was definitely a time related word and still pretty unique App Store-wise, so I choose it. “Snake eating its tail” is one of the symbols of eternity so it looked like a perfect fit too.

So why change the icon now?

I still think the name “Eternity Time Log” was a good choice. If you’ve heard about my app and search App Store for “eternity”, you will find it right away. With google search it’s not that straightforward. There is Samsung Eternity mobile phone so when you search google for “iPhone eternity”, my website will probably not show up on the first page of the results. But if you search for “iphone eternity app” or “iphone eternity time …”, something related to my app should be placed by google gods at the first spot. But this is searching. And what about browsing? Eternity is rather not an “impulse purchase type of app”. It’s a niche application for someone who knows what he’s looking for. You would not spend $7.99 just to get a taste of it. So if you’re gonna download it, you’ve probably already heard of it or you’re browsing iTunes App Store whispering “time, time, time…” mantra ;) .And the problem with “snake eating its tail” icon is that it’s a symbol of eternity (and not very well known for that), which is somewhat related to time, which is somewhat related to time tracking which is too distant from your mantra to catch your eye when browsing countless pages of apps even for “time manager/tracker/log” search result. That’s the problem. I finally got it off my chest, I feel so light ;) .

Snakes are scary

I also had some complains that the “snake” icon is scary (even demonic) and too dark. I sympathize with you, I’m afraid of snakes too. That’s when you figure out it’s a snake on the picture (”is this a zipper?” asked one of my friends :-P ). On the other hand it seems too toy-like and not-very-business-looking for some tastes. I understand that too.

“So what the frig is on the new icon” you ask?

Well, it’s a combination of a hourglass and another symbol of eternity – “8″, which has its origins in, guess what, hourglass (as far as I know). I hope it’s closer metaphor to “time, time, time…” mantra and still quite distinguishing. I also hope it’s simple, beautiful, elegant and will bring me some much desired design awards ;) . Come on, at least you have to admit it’s not scary :) . I’m releasing the app with new icon in the 1.3.1 bugfix-only update (currently in review by Apple). The basic goal is to catch some more eyeballs on App Store without sacrificing all the uniqueness. I have no idea if it’s gonna have any impact on downloads and sales, but if it will, I should be able to notice it in the absence of any additional features. It’s a small experiment in some way. I showed the new icon to some Eternity users and they liked it. I hope you’ll like it too.

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If you expect “Yet another iPhone developer made a fortune selling farting app” kind of story, you will be disappointed. Read on if you want something different. Not that I have anything against farting apps and their developers. I really don’t.

What? When?

Actually this day is both behind me and yet to come. It means I already told my employer that I quit, but for various reasons and obligations my contract ends May 31. Until then, I’ll be finishing various projects and in May I’ll be on leave.

It’s not about money, it’s about sending a message

Did I make a fortune selling on App Store? As for now I don’t even make enough to pay my bills. So why did I quit my day job? Let me tell you my little story here.

I wanted to write software since I was a kid (and that was when ZX Spectrum was the king). I owned SHARP MZ700 (have you even heard of it :) ), Commodore 64, Amiga 1200, PC and a Mac. Eventually I became a software developer in a big corporation and I’ve been working there for almost 9 years.

I always liked tactical and economic games. I spend many hours playing them but at the same time I felt that I should start playing a real game instead. It was really bugging me. So about two years ago I registered my one-person company and developed my first app: weight training assistant for Nokia phones called Treneiro. I needed it, used it, liked it, but I sold only a handful of copies.

Few years ago, mainly for personal reasons, I got interested in personal development, time management and similar topics. So when the iPhone and the App Store came out it was natural for me to develop an app that I needed and then try selling it. That’s how Eternity Time Log was born.

As I mentioned, I haven’t make big money selling Eternity. But the feedback I got from costumers was very, very positive and encouraging. As I write this, there are 14 user reviews from 4 countries for the paid version of Eternity on App Store. 13 of them gave Eternity 5 starts for 5 possible and the one with 4 starts is still titled ?Awesome app? :) . I also got many ?Love this app!? emails where people say my small app changed their life for a bit better. And that’s hard to ignore. A big THANK YOU here for all these emails and reviews.

So as Joker said in ?The Dark Knight?: it’s not about money, it’s about sending a message.

The message for you, dear reader, is that I’m committed. If you find my app useful, I’m committed to make it even more so in the future. Otherwise, I’ll be out of business. If you find my story interesting, I’m committed to make it more interesting in the future, following my little dream. If you come back to this blog, you’ll see how it unfolds.

The message for me is that there is no going back. I hope I can grow my business and I hope to grow too, in the process. Being creative, providing value, ?making something people want? as Paul Graham describes it, is too important for me to pass over the small opportunity I have right here, right now. I may fail. I’m just a human after all. We will see.

But the whole universe is in crisis!

Well, ?I don’t have to tell you things are bad?. Mr Howard Beale will do it much better :)

Hard to believe this scene was filmed the year I was born and ?hits it? so well again.

For me, the whole ?crisis thing? is politicians game, but our money, if not more, is at stake. So it obviously impacts me and possibly you too. But in hard times people tend to go for real value instead of casual pleasures and this can be an opportunity.

Going the self-employment route is my answer to the situation. I think I can create more value this way than working for a corporation. Because big corporations are like ogres. Why ogres? Because (if you didn’t know that already) ogres are like onions and onions have layers. Onions have layers -- ogres have layers -- corporations have layers. And it’s hard to give/get value through them. And yes, all three can make you cry ;) .

Because of that I don’t think that cubicle job is a good investment of my time and time has a lot of value to me. I’d like to invest it better and help you in pursuing that goal too. That’s for the start and we will see where I’ll go from there.

So here it is, something ends, something new begins

Is this a bad moment? A bad idea? Will I be able to create enough value? Will money follow it? That remains to be seen. I make some money already, I have some savings. I plan to update this blog once a week until I have more time in May. It will contain stories about Eternity development, my small business development and my personal development. English is not my native language, but I hope it will get better too. If you find any errors in my post, it’s perfectly OK to let me know about them.
Contest

If you’ve read that far, a little contest for you :) . What ?Network? and ?The Dark Knight? movies have in common? That question turned out to be too vague. So what’s the link between actors Peter Finch (Howard Beale in ?Network?) and Heath Ledger (the Joker in ?The Dark Knight?)? Besides profession of course ;) . The first three readers sending good answers get a free copy of Eternity (via promo code -- valid only in US App Store, sorry).

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