Record Time Droid vs Time Cop
Side-by-side comparison of two open source alternatives
Record Time Droid
RecordTimeDroid records time and shows elapsed time between previously recorded lines. It is useful to people who want to measure times for different tasks. It also is good for people who want to record date and time to store later.
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)
| Feature | Record Time Droid | Time Cop |
|---|---|---|
| License | GPL-3.0-only | Apache-2.0 |
| Install sources | F-Droid | F-DroidGitHub |
| Categories | Calendar | Calendar |
| Features | Ad-FreeOpen SourceNo Tracking | Ad-FreeOpen SourceNo Tracking |
| Platforms | Android | Android |
| Website | ||
| Source code |