You can talk about Tomighty at the Google Group. It's a software created and developed by Clio Cidral Junior, licensed to you under the Apache License 2.0. Still, what happens with plugins? Do we then have to write our plugin 3 times as well.? Just some more stuff to think about. Tomighty is a desktop timer specifically designed for the Pomodoro Technique. (Although you'd then still have to manually rewrite the GUI calls.) Unless Mono+C#+GTK# was going to be the new single cross-platform solution? (Although I don't think GTK is going to be any more satisfying in that role than Swing.) If you really do still want to do a C# version, I'd say convert it automatically with something like Sharpen the way NGit did. Ability to change the alert sound + volume via Settings Custom Timer Intervals A history of your activity. (Only supported in Google Chrome) Keyboard shortcuts. Audio notifications at the end of a timer period. I'm not sure what the advantage of a C# port would be, since the Java version seems to work just fine on Windows (7 at least). Ability to Pause or Reset the timer intervals. The timer triggered alert will appear, and the pre-selected sound will be played at the set time. You can configure the alarm clock appearance (text color, type. When setting the alarm, you can click the 'Test' button to preview the alert and check the sound volume. The alarm message will appear, and the preselected sound will be played at the set time. Alternatively, you can set the date and time to count days, hours, minutes, and seconds till (or from) the event. Set the hour and minute for the online alarm clock. Especially since it seems like 90% of the problems are related to the System Tray, and that those are more the fault of the Swing GUI rather than the Java language itself. Set the hour, minute, and second for the online countdown timer, and start it. If you want to pause the timer or turn it off completely, simply press the Pause or Stop button correspondingly. Click the Start a timer button to start the countdown. Choose any sound signal you like from the dropdown menu. But it sure is a shame to write the same thing 3 times (at least). Set the required time using Hour, Minute, and Second tabs. Personally, I lean heavily in favor of the former at the expense of the latter, but I understand many would feel the exact opposite. Hmm, I can appreciate the tension and trade-off between cross-platform portability vs native feel.
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