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RescueTime

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Velocity5.0

Automatic time tracking and focus tool

RescueTime's feed is all blog essays — no product signal to read

blogproductivitytime-trackingmarketing-feedno-product-signal
Current state
The crawled feed for RescueTime is its marketing blog, not a product changelog. Every entry is an opinion essay on work culture — busyness, meeting cost, hybrid teams, freelancing, time-blocking — with no reference to the RescueTime time-tracking product's features, releases, or fixes. There is no shipping activity to interpret here.
Where it's heading
Nothing about the product's direction can be inferred from these posts; they reflect a content-marketing cadence, not engineering output. To produce meaningful commentary the signal source needs to be repointed from blog.rescuetime.com to an actual release or changelog feed.
Prediction
Insufficient data: this feed carries no product releases, so no next product move can be predicted from it.

Recent moves

  1. 1d ago

    AI saved you time. So why are you still so busy?

    A blog essay on why AI-driven time savings haven't reduced workloads. Marketing content, not a product change — no RescueTime feature or release is involved.

    View source ↗
  2. 14d ago

    Busyness is the new micromanagement

    An opinion piece framing 'busyness' as a subtle form of micromanagement. Blog content with no product signal.

    View source ↗
  3. 1mo ago

    Meetings are eating your margins

    A blog post on the hidden dollar cost of meetings. Content marketing, not a changelog entry — no product capability changed.

    View source ↗
  4. 1mo ago

    The second shift no one is talking about

    An essay on the unpaid 'second shift' of domestic labor. Blog content unrelated to the RescueTime product.

    View source ↗
  5. 2mo ago

    Hybrid teams: Less circus, more choreography

    A blog post on making hybrid teams work. Marketing content, no product release or feature change.

    View source ↗
  6. 2mo ago

    Your next teammate might be a freelancer

    An essay on freelancers becoming permanent fixtures of teams in 2026. Blog content with no product signal.

    View source ↗