Private Mac activity tracking.
Trackr turns on-device keyboard and pointer activity into a calm local timeline, so focus, idle drift, and daily rhythm stay easy to read.
macOS 11+ / local history / private by default
A full workday, compressed into one readable strip.
Trackr keeps the important shape of the day visible: green for active stretches, red for idle drift, and quiet space for the parts that have not happened yet.
Recent rhythm without a spreadsheet habit.
The local history grid makes patterns obvious over weeks, but it stays lightweight enough to check in seconds.
Designed for a Mac, not a management dashboard.
Your activity timeline lives on your machine. The UI focuses on personal visibility instead of team surveillance.
Everything the day needs, nothing it does not.
Quick personal check-ins, readable activity signals, and a quiet download path keep the page focused on the product.
A full-day strip turns keyboard and pointer activity into an instantly scannable rhythm.
Active and idle slices roll into a simple score while the workday is still happening.
The archive grid shows how consistent your last few weeks have been without becoming a report.
Activity data stays on your Mac instead of living in a shared cloud dashboard.
Trackr is built for the menu bar and uses a compact desktop rhythm instead of a browser admin panel.
Last update, day coverage, and daily totals are visible without digging through settings.
The timeline reacts to real activity signals, so idle drift and focused work stay visually distinct.
Open it, read the day, and get back to work. The interface stays quiet on purpose.
Simple pricing for personal tracking.
Pay once for Trackr and keep your private activity timeline on your Mac.
Trackr is ready for your Mac.
Download the signed macOS build, keep your history local, and check the shape of your day from one focused interface.
Native macOS app
Built around a local timeline and lightweight menu bar workflow for personal activity visibility.
Private activity history
Your activity slices and archive stay on your Mac, keeping the product useful without turning it into a cloud dashboard.