26 comments

  • fellowmartian 3 hours ago

    From the title I thought it’d be a timer for the agent itself, so it doesn’t waste time on endless thinking loops, etc.

    • emson 3 hours ago

      Oh that’s an idea? Could use hooks or something?

  • pj_mukh 2 hours ago

    Love that it follows you from terminal to terminal, super useful.

    Though, if you're following Cal Newport-ian rules, watching over multiple agents doing their work is no longer a 25 minute "deep work" Pomodoro, and god knows Newport has been complaining about it [1]

    [1]: https://calnewport.com/avoiding-digital-productivity-traps/#...

    • emson 2 hours ago

      Nice! I love Cal Newport. I've definitely found spinning up multiple Claude Code instances eats into your focus, and you can "lose yourself" quite quickly. I find I use pomodoros more as nudges, and use the "beeps" to bring me back if I'm in the browser or something. but yeah... it's a trap for sure!

  • felooboolooomba 5 hours ago

    Also for tmux (which I always run claude inside)

    https://github.com/olimorris/tmux-pomodoro-plus

  • hadlock 2 hours ago

    Opus is so slow these days what I really want is a bell sound to ring when it's done. I kick off some task and then it takes 3-12 minutes to complete. It's wrong, so I tell it to revert and try again with slightly different instructions.

    • momentmaker an hour ago

      You can use edit your settings.json in ~/.claude and put a hook for it like this:

          "Stop": [
            {
              "hooks": [
                {
                  "type": "command",
                  "command": "afplay ~/.claude/hooks/chime.wav",
                  "async": true
                },
      • hombre_fatal 37 minutes ago

        That hook is also called when subagents stop which means you'll get a lot of false positives.

        Ideally you are only notified when the main agent stops, the main agent has a question, or a subagent has a question.

        I created a script that does those checks before emitting a macOS notification and then called it in each hook. Something like this:

            "Stop": [
              {
                "hooks": [
                  {
                    "type": "command",
                    "command": "script.sh",
                    "timeout": 10
                  }
                ]
              }
            ],
            "PreToolUse": ...
            "PermissionRequest": ...
            "Elicitation": ...
        
        Maybe someone has found a better solution.
    • emson an hour ago

      Have you tried analysing all your prompts, and then telling it to "figure out" what custom skills might improve your prompts? I do actually have another project I'm working on that does this... it's been super useful for seeing how I prompt, what Skills I use and getting them to evolve and improve (I know Hermes does some of this, but it's been interesting rolling my own - will release soon!!)

    • sathish316 an hour ago

      Cmux notifications does this too

    • bicepjai 2 hours ago

      Try superset, it does that

  • murats 3 hours ago

    I like this. Small tools inside the workflow feel much more useful than separate productivity apps I have to remember to open.

    • hadlock 2 hours ago

      I ended up building a vs-code/IDE style workflow for claude that has a "file browser" of CC sessions in the left column, sorted by repo, and then terminal in the right column, and then I've been tacking features like this onto it

      • emson an hour ago

        Fantastic! You should open source it

    • emson 3 hours ago

      Me too. Also it’s good to get decent reports that can be used for other things. For example the logs help me fill in my time sheets. Also it forces me to take breaks

  • marcuskaz 3 hours ago

    Great idea! I just created one for Pi

    https://github.com/mkaz/pi-modoro

    • emson 3 hours ago

      Fantastic. I think these small productivity tools embedded in harnesses is pretty powerful. I especially like that you can get the AI to use it and also just pop into the CLI. Also nice to generate useful web dashboards etc

  • freedomben 3 hours ago

    I recently had a nasty accident too and snapped my collar bone, broken tibia, and 6 broken ribs, so I can absolutely relate. Claude Code was there for me in a big way as well :-)

    It's a long road to recovery. I'm 5 months in and still in a lot of pain, but it does (slowly) get better. Hope you're spirits stay up!

    • emson 3 hours ago

      Thanks for sharing. I was stuck in a Greek hospital for 8 days with 2 fractured vertebrae, before I could get home. It’s easy to get into a spiral, but putting your mind to build something really helps. I do hope your ribs and collar bone is getting better? I’ve been lucky, as it will heal but could have been really bad. Phew!

  • Vaslo 3 hours ago

    Great idea and I’ll definitely try it but all those flags needed to run the startup command scare me lol

    • emson 3 hours ago

      It has sensible defaults just do /pomo start

      It’s only if you want to customise it. Also CC will do it for you. It’s very agent friendly

  • tiahura 3 hours ago

    Side note, many windows people still don't know about psmux https://github.com/psmux/psmux

    • emson 3 hours ago

      Ah nice thanks. Love tmux, incidentally I came across this the other day as an alternative to Ghostty: https://supacode.sh/

  • OttoVonBizark 3 hours ago

    tool is great by your readme is pure unreadable ai slop - try to naturalise it a bit

    • emson 3 hours ago

      Mmm apols. You’d think I’d have learned my lesson by now, but it’s just so seductive to have it write for you. I got burned with this very HN post for doing just that, but they kindly let me rewrite it. Will tweak it. Thanks for the feedback!