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Pomodoro Timer for NO postpone

Productivity

Free

Pomodoro Timer for NO postpone

by Anil Kumar Yerasi

v3.0 3 MB Universal 4+

Description

Find your best Pomodoro app — not just a timer. Pomodoro Timer uses simple, local intelligence to suggest ideal session lengths and auto-map your tasks to Pomodoros — all stored on your device. Perfect for writers, students, coders, and anyone who wants to get more done in less time.

What’s special

Adaptive Pomodoros — our timer learns from your completed sessions and interruptions, then suggests smarter durations (10–90 min, 5-minute steps).

Smart Start (Task → Timer mapping) — name a task and get an instant recommended session based on similar past tasks + intelligent keyword heuristics.

Privacy-first & frictionless — no account, no signup, everything stored locally.

Simple, distraction-free UI — large timer, one-tap start, quick presets, and gentle haptics.

History & insights — see your recent sessions, completion rate, and interruption count to improve focus habits.

How it works

Type a task or pick a preset → Smart Start suggests a session length.

Start the timer — the app records completed durations and interruptions.

The next suggestion adapts using your last sessions and a small interruption penalty so your session matches how you actually work.


The Pomodoro Technique is a time management method developed by Francesco Cirillo in the late 1980s. The technique uses a timer to break down work into intervals, traditionally 25 minutes in length, separated by short breaks.

There are six steps in the original technique:

Decide on the task to be done.
Set the pomodoro timer (traditionally to 25 minutes).
Work on the task.
End work when the timer rings and put a checkmark on a piece of paper.
If you have fewer than four checkmarks, take a short break (3–5 minutes) and then return to step 2; otherwise continue to step 6.
After four pomodoros, take a longer break (15–30 minutes), reset your checkmark count to zero, then go to step 1.
For the purposes of the technique, a pomodoro is the interval of time spent working.

Regular breaks are taken, aiding assimilation. A short (3–5 minutes) rest separates consecutive pomodoros. Four pomodoros form a set. A longer (15–30 minute) rest is taken between sets.

A goal of the technique is to reduce the impact of internal and external interruptions on focus and flow. A pomodoro is indivisible; when interrupted during a pomodoro, either the other activity must be recorded and postponed (using the inform – negotiate – schedule – call back strategy) or the pomodoro must be abandoned.

After task completion in a pomodoro, any time remaining could be devoted to activities such as:

Review and edit the work just completed.
Review the activities from a learning point of view: What did I learn? What could I do better or differently?
Review the list of upcoming tasks for the next planned Pomodoro time blocks, and start reflecting on or updating those tasks.
Cirillo suggests:

Specific cases should be handled with common sense: If you finish a task while the Pomodoro is still ticking, the following rule applies: If a Pomodoro begins, it has to ring. It’s a good idea to take advantage of the opportunity for overlearning, using the remaining portion of the Pomodoro to review or repeat what you’ve done, make small improvements, and note what you’ve learned until the Pomodoro rings.
The stages of planning, tracking, recording, processing and visualizing are fundamental to the technique. In the planning phase, tasks are prioritized by recording them in a "To Do Today" list. This enables users to estimate the effort tasks require. As pomodoros are completed, they are recorded, adding to a sense of accomplishment and providing raw data for subsequent self-observation and improvement.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

What's new (v3.0)

• Adaptive Pomodoros — the timer now learns from your last sessions and suggests the best length.
• Smart Start — name a task and get an instant recommended session.
• Privacy-first: everything stays on your device (no signup).
Try it: name a task and tap the suggestion to start a smarter session.