Logtime 42 //free\\ -
The philosophy is radical: You don't log time after you work. You commit time before you start. Machined from recycled aluminum and Gorilla Glass, the Logtime 42 feels expensive. Not "luxury watch" expensive, but "German kitchen knife" expensive. It has a satisfying heft (98g).
(Deducted one point for the lack of backfill and the punishing learning curve.) logtime 42
That’s it. The device now shows a countdown. You cannot pause. You cannot switch tasks. To "abort," you must press and hold the Pledge button for 5 seconds, which records an event. The device doesn't judge you, but the haptic feedback becomes a disappointed double-buzz . The Core Experience: Time as a contract Using the Logtime 42 for a week changed my relationship with distraction. The philosophy is radical: You don't log time after you work
At first glance, the Logtime 42 looks like a love child between a vintage stopwatch and a Rubik’s Cube. It is a palm-sized, hexagonal device (42mm thick, hence the name) with a monochrome E-Ink screen on one side and a physical, rotating dial on the other. There are no apps, no Bluetooth pairing required (though optional), and no home screen cluttered with graphs. Not "luxury watch" expensive, but "German kitchen knife"
The signature feature is the — a knurled, clickless rotary encoder on the right side. The left side houses a single physical button: The Pledge .
4.7/5 Price: $249 (Base Model) / $299 (Leather Strap Edition) Competition: TimeFlip 2, TickTick (software), Remarkable 2, DOSTyle Analog Timer The Pitch: What is the Logtime 42? In an era of endless notifications and infinite scrolling, the Logtime 42 arrives with a bold claim: “Stop tracking time. Architect it.”
The device comes in three finishes: Space Gray, Sand (matte beige), and the limited Monochrome (black on black). The E-Ink display refreshes instantly (no ghosting, a miracle in 2026) and is readable in direct sunlight. Setup is done via a 2-minute web-based wizard (logtime.xyz/setup). You don’t need an account. You simply define your three primary "Domains" (e.g., Deep Work, Admin, Recovery ).
