http://www.chimoosoft.com/timer.html
It's not as elegant as WatchIt, but it does have a "Mini Window" which
is quite small *and* it responds to Speech Recognition. As strikes
against it, Chimoo has a wonky UI with preferences divided between a
drawer and the "Preferences..." dialog. Because of this, it took me a
while to figure out that the alarm sound selected in Preferences... is
not on my system and that's why the timer did nothing when it got to
zero. So, check those Preferences... and play around with the speech
recog. "Start" and "Reset" work pretty consistently for me, but "Stop"
is harder to get right. For the purposes of Merlin's tip, though,
"Start" and "Reset" are all you need!
Did I mention that it's free? ;-)
http://homepage.mac.com/tfinley/LeakyPuppy/fob.html
I found that the most convenient way to use it is to set the "Temporary
Timer..." (under the Timers menu) to 8 minutes, and then when the timer
expires, just hit cmd-T to recall the Temporary Timer. For some reason
I can't get cmd-L to work to recall the last timer...
Oh yeah, and this one's free, too. ;-)
Finally, not really apropos of Merlin's tip is Fob (as in watch fob I
assume):
http://homepage.mac.com/tfinley/LeakyPuppy/fob.html
This one is a lot more complicated, but for a stay-at-home Dad, the
ability to have multiple countdown timers all going at once is making
me drool. [Eeew] It has a fun, if gratuitous, UI widget so you can
drag the hands of a clock to set the countdown times.
And yes, it's free too.
But don't forget, I *did* pay for Tinderbox, so I'm not a completely
tight-fisted! ;-)
Unix security :37
Look 3 1:21
study Perl :16 <-- currently
user support 3:49
(the above is hours:minutes). So, if a user requests something (I'm in
at IS/IT department) I'd click on "user support" above and it would
start adding time to the existing 3:49.