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17
Jun 13

The Freckle Lounge

Got a question you need answered sooner than later?  Have a concern about your Freckle account?

Weekdays between 10 am and 5 pm ET visit the Freckle team in the brand new Freckle Lounge!

Even if you don’t have an immediate problem, stop in and say ‘Hi’ to us. :)

Get directions to the Freckle Lounge here.

Who might you find hanging out in the Lounge?

  • Amy Hoy: Co-Founder and Freckle Designer
  • Thomas Fuchs: Co-Founder and JavaScript Guru
  • Devon Kreider: Resident Support Super Hero
  • Thomas Cannon: Awesome Programmer and Freckle Intern

If no one is in the Freckle Lounge to help you, send us an email to support@letsfreckle.com

It’s no fun without you, so stop in and send us some love! (And yes, problems count as love)

lounge-chairs-1210


19
Jun 12

It’s OK to Have Your Head in the Cloud

The business insurance specialists at Premierline Direct Business Insurance have graciously named Freckle as one of the best time tracking tools in the cloud.  Thanks guys!  The U.K. based subsidiary of Allianz Insurance lists some of the best free and paid-for cloud based applications that help businesses of all sizes grow.

The list of innovative cloud-based applications includes tools for invoicing, HR and recruitment, project management, time tracking, source control and bug tracking.    We’re honored to be listed alongside some of the best business applications in the cloud!

Click here to see the full list of applications in the cloud that might just help you keep your operational costs down and ensure you’re working efficiently, while you stay well within your budget!


2
Oct 09

Woohoo, press coverage!

From the “other people are tooting our horn so now we will re-toot it ourselves, just in case you missed it the first time around” files:

Lifehacker!

Lifehacker named us one of their Top 10 Underhyped Web Apps.

To wit:

… Freckle doesn’t require you to learn a new set of rules or input methods to track how you spend your time working for clients. If you type “Writing copy for Benderson Corp. 1h45m,” it assigns a 1-hour-and-45-minute billing for Benderson. Want to make something non-billable, but still tracked? Add an asterisk after it. Freckle offers visually appealing reports about how you’re spending time for clients, but also how you’re spending your own time, giving you the chance to assess how you’re spending your time. A plan with one account and one project is free, and any of Freckle’s other plans can be tried for 30 days free, so if you don’t find yourself addicted to its charts and graphs, you can return to your spreadsheet.

And don’t forget: you can write 1h45m, but you can also write 1.75 or 105 and Freckle will figure it out for you.

Futurezone–In German!

As you may know, Thomas and I (Amy!) live in Vienna, Austria, and so do our totally indispensable partners at abloom. ORF is the Osterreichischer Rundfunk–the (publicly-funded) Austrian Broadcasting Agency, essentially.

They did a piece on Freckle, and another time service based in Austria. It’s in German originally but this translation is pretty decent!

Dan Taylor’s Video Interview – 8 mos Ago

A while back, we did a video interview for Dan Taylor, a social media reporter who also lives in Vienna. Our interviewer was his partner Magda Pressel. And Dan clearly had a blast putting the footage together. (Just play the first few seconds, even, to see what I mean!)

freckle: time tracking rethought from Dan Taylor on Vimeo.

It’s particularly fun to look back and see where things were when we were just getting started!


5
Dec 08

Calamity howlers & positively selecting with surprise

Welcome to Dramatis Commentatis Theater, Act 1.

The crowd is hushed. Four actors in black clothing with black hats stand straight on the darkened stage, head bowed. The spotlight turns to the fellow one from the left. He jerks, suddenly, from quiet stillness to violent motion, ripping off his hat and stomping on it.

OMGZ THE PASSWORD FIELD IS CLEAR TEXT? HOW AM I SUPPOSED TO KNOW THAT IN ADVANCE. GET REAL! YOU MUST BE KIDDIN ME!

The remaining three stir slowly from their own monolithic stillness. They turn their heads this way and that and whisper, almost to themselves. Your ears strain to hear. You’re not entirely sure to believe what your brain is telling you that you’re hearing—they are that quiet.

I liked it.

It’s neat.

Finally.

You reel a little, dizzy from the outburst and from the strain to hear the whispering.

You’ve just experienced the phenomenon of the (near) silent majority and the calamity howlers.

Meet the calamity howlers

A “calamity howler” is a persistently negative individual who predicts rack & ruin, frequently and at the top of his voice. It’s a great term that was especially popular in political writings back in the mid-to-late 1800′s but has since fell out of disuse.

I think this is a real shame and, if this isn’t your first day on the internet, I’m sure you understand why.

Calamity howlers in modern times

Among other, shall we say, strongly negative feedback we’ve received, we had at least one individual telling us we must be “fucking kidding him” because of our clear text password fields on the signup form.

On the subject of clear text credit card fields on the same form (and every other web app), he remained mum.

This man is a great example of a calamity howler. Just like people who tell us that if we only perform an auto-craniorectalectomy on our pricing scheme, he might consider signing up.

There’s just one problem with his theory.

Calamity howlers don’t become customers

And in the rare event that one does pony up money, you’ll soon regret taking it.

Anyone who feels so deeply wronged by a free service is going to feel even more wronged once he has paid for it.

Fake security vs Real security

We’re not going to change the fact that our password fields are clear text by default on signup.

Despite having expletives hurled at us (are expletives ever handed over gently?), and being told more politely that breaking convention is totally pointless.

freckle_ Signup-1.png

Why did we even do it in the first place?

A simple reason: We hate the fake security theater surrounding web applications.

Real security is important to us: we keep your credit card data secure by not storing it ourselves—we leave that to the professionals of Authorize.net. They know what they’re doing with that stuff.

But fake security is our enemy. Fake security adds hurdles with no gain. With real security, the extra work is on us, to integrate with the credit card processing service. With fake security, the hurdles are for you, our customer: continuously logging in to applications that hardly contain sensitive nature (delicious, I’m looking at you), starred out password fields on registration that simply increase the chance of errors.

freckle_ Signup.png

But, still, clear text password fields are not what everybody on the intertubes is trained to expect. Wouldn’t it be easier to just do what everyone else does?

The beauty of positive selection

Well, yes, it’d be easier. I wouldn’t be writing this article, for one. (At least not about this particular topic.)

But down that road madness lies!

People who like freckle like it because it’s different. That’s the reason we like it, too.

So when you first sign up, within the first few fields, you experience something different. Those password fields. The checkbox that lets you hide your password in case someone really is peeking over your shoulder (or you’re ultra paranoid).

If you’re like us, you hate those damn fake security password fields. And so when you come across our solution, you’ll smile. You might write us a nice little something about it.

You’re probably also going to like the rest of the app, too, because that little password field switcheroo is simply a small manifestation of our entire design philosophy.

slash7 freckle_ Dashboard.png

If, on the other hand, you react like we just kicked your gramma in the teeth, you’re not going to like the app. It’s going to be one long elderly-face-kicking session for you.

So, sure, we could make the password fields back into what everyone else does to eliminate a part of the signup process that feels like a speed bump to some people. But that’d be almost like lying, wouldn’t it?

It’d be changing one projection of our design philosophy in order to entice people who aren’t going to like the rest of the app.

Folks like that will be happier with some other software in the time tracking space, the kind where you have to use 3 drop-down menus to select your client, then your project, and then your predefined task before you log your time. That will be comforting to them.

Why waste their time? Why waste ours?

We’d rather do what we think is right and let that be a line drawn in the sand for people who aren’t going to agree with us, anyway.

Otherwise we’re just going to have to take up gramma-kicking as a habit.

Do you enjoy a good gramma-kicking and other interface design intrigues? You should [subscribe][http://feeds.feedburner.com/freckletimetracking].