The Good Tech Companies - 5+ Open-Source Projects for Focus & Productivity —To Support Via Kivach
Episode Date: July 7, 2026This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/5-open-source-projects-for-focus-and-productivity-to-support-via-kivach. Cats blocking socia...l media and tools that track every distraction. Your focus and productivity may need this, and Kivach will help you support this software. Check more stories related to undefined at: https://hackernoon.com/c/undefined. You can also check exclusive content about #open-source, #productivity-tools, #free-software, #crypto-donations, #kivach-donations, #obyte, #good-company, #hackernoon-top-story, and more. This story was written by: @obyte. Learn more about this writer by checking @obyte's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Cats blocking social media and tools that track every distraction. Your focus and productivity may need this, and Kivach will help you support this software.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This audio is presented by Hacker Noon, where anyone can learn anything about any technology.
Five plus open source projects for focus and productivity to support via Kiva.
By Obite, we get it. There are a lot of online distractions these days, from YouTube Totic Talk to instant messages. It's all too much.
You may even have games and other entertaining software on your devices, tempting when you need to do actual work.
Well, this time applies the solution to fight fire with fire, because a lot of productivity
related open source and free software tools are also around. Putting the phone down or closing that
game isn't always easy, but you can always get some help installed. We'll explore some useful
tools for this matter ahead. If you find them useful, you can visit underscore underscore Kiva
underscore underscore to send crypto donations to their developers on GitHub. Cat Gatekeeper and Pauzy,
if you've ever lived with a cat, you'll likely know that most of them love Toshit on your
PC or laptop. While you're using it, now, that's an oblige.
obligatory break, but the software CAD gatekeeper recreated these cases to allow work. Instead of
pausing all activity, it has some key websites where a chubby, blonde cat will take over your screen
if you've been there too long. Created by the independent developer, Zokuzoku, and released in
2026, this light browser extension includes the most popular social media. X, formerly Twitter, Facebook,
Reddit, Threads, Blue Sky, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube. You decide the time
before the cat appears, and also the duration of the break. It's private and ad-free, by the way,
H-T-TPS colon slash-slash-W-W-W YouTube, com, watch, V equals XZYH underscore HV-V-F-O and embeddable equals true inspired by cat gatekeeper.
We also have Pazi, released by Shivam Yadiv.
This app is a more aggressive blocker that works offline and encompasses all websites and
the whole operating system.
You can choose between a cat, a Shiba-inu dog, a Capabara, or a monkey.
The break is almost mandatory.
If you want to donate to either of these projects, you can find them on Kiva, too.
Kerbox and Quest phone.
You scrolled 416 reels.
You had an attention span of 5.59 seconds, video.
That sentence is a wake-up call, isn't it?
Well, that's part of what Kerbox, formerly DigiPause, can do on Android devices.
Created by, Nethical, in 2024, Kerbox can measure your time in all allowed apps, block them,
turn them black and white, offer a focus mode, and more on its way. The app can also block comments,
explicit content, reels, and keywords. ITRE directs to different sites when a keyword is found.
An optional uninstall feature and its custom warning screens will ensure you can't cheat.
However, a tauso includes times when cheating is allowed, or you can even enable it only
AS an activity tracker. Quest phone was once part of DigiPause, but now it's an independent app by
itself. This one gamifies productivity not only by blocking apps, but also by giving streaks, collectibles,
rewards, and different levels. As they describe it, almost any real-life habit can be converted into a
quest. Both apps are privacy-friendly, and they're still in development. If you want to donate,
the author has a Patreon account. For crypto donations, visit Kiva, Activity Watch. Released in 2016 by
Eric and Johann Vyarhol, this is an activity tracker more focused on stats.
than blocks. If you want to know with figures and pie charts what you've been up to all week,
not only on your phone, but also on Windows, MacOS, and Linux, this one is for you. And it also
works on Chrome and Firefox, so a lot is covered. Activity Watch will do exactly what its name
suggests and organize all data in each categories like top window titles, top apps, and top
browsers, all of it including the specific names and periods you've spent on them. A colorful
timeline is also available for you to check everything chronologically. You'll be in control of all this
private data, which never reaches any cloud, only your own device. Contributions are welcome and
encouraged on GitHub. The developers are planning to work on this software long-term, but they're volunteers.
So, any donation is well received to cover infrastructure and server costs. They accept tips from
several platforms, including cryptocurrency. You can donate to this project on Kiva as well. Super-product
Maybe a to-do list is what you need to complete all your tasks.
Super productivity offers a comprehensive app in this field, available for Windows, Linux, MacOS, Android, and iOS.
Created by Johannes Millen in 2017, this software can track your time, but also help you organize it and focus on what you really need to do.
Its main features include tasks and subtasks, organization by tags and categories, customizable boards, focus mode, Pomodoro Timer, Break Reminders,
and personal stats. It can be easily integrated with apps like calendars, GitHub, Jira,
GidLab, Trello, Dropbox, and click up. Besides, not only text IS allowed, you can attach files and
notes to every task. As in the other tools on this list, your data is private too.
you may contribute to this project if you want to. The more obvious one is coding on GitHub,
but you can also translate to your language, provide support to other users, and give suggestions
for new features. Of course, you can also send a monetary contribution. This project is available
on Kiva for crypto donations. Procrastascan appeared in 2024 as a project by Mark Pueckies,
and it offers a different approach. Instead of focusing on apps, it goes for keywords and context.
focus score is dynamically calculated according to the relevance of the content you're interacting with.
If that score is over zero, five, the content is considered relevant for the prompt you configured,
while lower scores are considered a distraction. Then, the software intervenes on your screen.
So, instead of simple blocks, procrastascan checks semantic similarity, meaning it tries to
understand context and topics. Someone researching anthropology could browse Wikipedia without
trouble, while sports news or trending videos might lower the focus score. The extension can block
tabs, save distractions for later, color the browser toolbar red, or show productivity dashboards.
An experimental chatbot intervention also exists through a local LLM connection. Privacy handling
stays local and offline, with no data collection. This tool runs on Firefox, Chrome, Edge,
and Opera. As with any other open source software on GitHub, you can send your own code contributions.
If you wish to tip the developer, you can use Kiva. Donate and receive donations. Donating on Kiva is a swift, easy process. You'll only need the repository name or link, a crypto wallet with some funds, an Obite wallet works, and a couple of minutes. No need for registrations, and no need for the developers to set up anything beforehand. You can literally send the most popular cryptocurrencies to any repo available on GitHub by just pasting a name or link and clicking, donate. On the other hand, after
sending the funds, you'll need to tell recipients about it because they'll need a quick verification
GitHub attestation to claim them. This attestation is done via Chadbot on the Obite wallet. It's free,
and it doesn't require much. Once claimed, developers can choose between keeping the whole amount
or sharing it with other repos automatically, which is called a cascading donation, a native
feature of Kiva. Are you curious about other free tools? Check our previous episodes. Five open source
and free operating systems to donate via Kiva.
5 open source blogging and writing tools to donate to via Kiva, EPV.
5 open source, free software you didn't know you needed to protect your data.
5 open source crypto tools you can use for free, and support with Kiva.
5 open source projects to donate via Kiva, episode 7.
Games to play for free.
5 open source software for global teams to donate via Kiva.
Author your own adventure with these 5 must try free tools.
tools. Five open source and green projects to donate via Kiva. Five funny and weird software
you can use for free and donate via Kiva. Five open source projects for books and readers to
support via Kiva. Five open source projects for restaurants and diners to support via Kiva.
Featured Vectiz. Thank you for listening to this Hackernoon story, read by artificial intelligence.
Visit hackernoon.com to read, write, learn and publish.
