So I built Time Keep, it puts world clocks, timers, alarms, countdowns, a stopwatch, breaks, a sleep planner, Discord timestamps, and more into one always open place.
Works without an account or signup. All tools are fully functional immediately. Sign in to save your data across sessions. Pro adds live cross-device sync.
Shared countdown links show the correct time in every viewer's timezone. Built with Next.js, Supabase, Clerk, and Vercel.
The same principle I try to bring up when building something for consumers whose primary objective is something else, and the solution/app is competing with something easy to find, “Can this compete or be faster with pen/paper, or just writing a note to self on WhatsApp?”
The Native Time Apps on macOS are pretty good these days, so I have done away with all sorts of Timezome, Alarm, Timer-related Apps except The Clock.[1]
I think The Clock is just one developer, and I have had the app for as long as I can remember (easily 10+ years). I can do without it and use the native clock to replace most functions, but I like that time slider, which I can use to check the time differences between zones. Settings sync across devices via iCloud. It is just there whenever I need it. It is one of those that you buy once and keep abusing for ages.
7$ is an insanely high price to have something for a monthly rate.
Just want to point out because of the number 7 as a reference but I have a vps which costs me 7$... per Year.
Edit: I think if the developer behind it is reading this, then perhaps I slightly recommend to actually follow towards a more donation based model. Its just my feeling that it might be very hard to sell at 7$/month but I feel like you wish to earn money from your project and that's very understandable and I wish you good luck in that even if it might be that many/most people in this website aren't the direct audience for this price-point :-)