TimeFence: persistent focus timer HUD — buy direct, lifetime license.
Guided workflow variation

If you are researchingtime management reset after interruption Windows HUD, you already knowtrays are not enough.

“Soft” focus apps are great at accounts and animations. If your problem is that time disappears, you need a persistent HUD, not a new subscription.

$2.49 USD — Perpetual License

One-time purchase · Lifetime updates · Delivered via the Microsoft Store

Purchased and updated securely through the Microsoft Store. No account needed on our site, no subscription, and a Microsoft receipt for easy corporate expensing.

Full TimeFence overview
One-time purchase No telemetry Local-first

windows · local-first · buy direct · one-time purchase

If this sounds like your week

The internet’s ADHD advice is long on habits and short on a visible clock.

If you are researching “time management reset after interruption Windows HUD,” the odds are high that the issue is not “try harder.” It is that your attention system does not get reliable internal signals about duration. The fix is a persistent external signal—on screen, over apps—so time becomes a real object, not a background theory.

Where tooling usually breaks

You can journal about time and still not feel it pass.

The worst outcome for a search like “time management reset after interruption Windows HUD” is another listicle that assumes your problem is willpower. The better framing is input design: the countdown must be where your eyes are already going to be, over the work itself. If it is in a different device or a different window, you will keep relearning the same gap between intention and attention.

Where TimeFence lands

Externalize the countdown. Keep the locus of control in one place: on screen, over apps.

TimeFence is built to support searches like “time management reset after interruption Windows HUD” without the moralizing. It gives you a persistent, always-on-top HUD so duration is a visible object. Optional Strict Mode exists if you want a harder contract on certain blocks. The rest is local, quiet software: Rust/Tauri, no mandatory account, no data collection. One purchase. A timer that is allowed to be boring because boring is the point. Every ping wipes internal pacing; restarting with a visible segment rebuilds structure faster than ambient clocks.

$2.49 USD — Perpetual License

One-time purchase · Lifetime updates · Delivered via the Microsoft Store

Purchased and updated securely through the Microsoft Store. No account needed on our site, no subscription, and a Microsoft receipt for easy corporate expensing.

Learn more about TimeFence

windows · local-first · buy direct · one-time purchase

What you get

Feature highlights

Persistent timer HUD

Always-visible countdown on a zero-latency overlay—peripheral time you can't ignore, without modal chrome blocking your work.

Rust + Tauri, local-first

No Electron tax, no sign-in, and no telemetry. Your focus sessions never leave your machine.

Strict Mode

A real enforcement switch. Start a block and the soft “I’ll just pause it” path disappears—on purpose. Use it when you mean it.

Especially when

  • Combat time blindness: keep a persistent visual timer HUD in view on Windows, not in the tray
  • Reduce context switching: stop tab-flipping to web timers or “focus” apps with account walls
  • When you need commitment, not cosplay: optional Strict Mode for deterministic focus sessions you cannot abandon mid-block

Trusted by pragmatic desktop users

Built for people who prefer tools that stay local.

Real workflows: focus timers that stay visible, batches that never leave the disk, and renames you can rewind.

Customer review 01

PinPoint: Always On Top saves me so much time as I can organize all my report materials without having to flip between windows or tabs. I love the fact that it is straightforward and simple.

Senior Accountant · Manufacturing Company · United States · PinPoint

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Customer review 02

I used to get so frustrated when my Taskbar would freeze and disappear. Taskbar Sentinel has eliminated that pain without subjecting me to another subscription.

Darren · Calgary, Alberta, Canada · Taskbar Sentinel

Learn more
Customer review 03

OpticBatch and MetaForge are a lifesaver for me as a person with a passion for photography. They give me the ability to stay organized and keep personal information confidential when I post pictures online.

Sherri · United States · OpticBatch & MetaForge

Learn more

Quotes are shown with customer permission; names and locations appear as reviewers provided them.

Our Core Moat

Engineered to respect your system boundaries.

System Resource Monitor (Idle State Comparison)
Automata Labs sub-5MB idle memory footprint compared to generic Electron applications

Lightweight Native Stack

Compiled Rust core wrapped inside an optimized Tauri shell. No heavy background node loops or duplicate Chromium engines cooking your memory footprint (<5MB idle RAM).

100% Local-First Privacy

Executes entirely on-device with full offline isolation. Absolute zero background telemetry policies, no metrics aggregation, and zero mandatory cloud-sync accounts.

Perpetual Fallback Licenses

Pay a single, clear one-time purchase price. Own your specific native software utility execution tier permanently without artificial subscription paywalls or ongoing usage tax.

FAQ

Straight answers—no glossary dump

Is TimeFence a good option if I searched for “time management reset after interruption Windows HUD”?

TimeFence is a Rust and Tauri Windows app: a persistent timer HUD, optional Strict Mode, no mandatory account, and no telemetry. You pay once on the Microsoft Store and run it locally. It is designed for people who are tired of tray timers, browser-tab Pomodoro pages, and “focus” apps that are better at onboarding than at keeping time visible on screen.

Will the HUD steal focus or interrupt typing?

TimeFence is built as a high-performance overlay. The point is a visible countdown in peripheral vision—not yanking the foreground window. You can keep typing in your editor, spreadsheet, or browser without a modal fighting you for input.

What is Strict Mode, and is it required?

Strict Mode is optional. When you use it, a session is meant to be a commitment: pause and quit paths are not there to make quitting frictionless. If you do not want that enforcement, you do not have to use it. If you do want it, it is a tool—not a pep talk.

Why a HUD instead of a system tray icon?

Trays are where visibility goes to die. A persistent HUD is “out of sight, out of mind” in reverse: your eyes can pick up the countdown without a deliberate “check the timer” step.

The tray is where clocks go to die.
Put time back on screen.

TimeFence is a one-time Windows purchase. No subscriptions, no telemetry. Just a local Rust/Tauri HUD with optional Strict Mode for serious blocks.

$2.49 USD — Perpetual License

One-time purchase · Lifetime updates · Delivered via the Microsoft Store

Purchased and updated securely through the Microsoft Store. No account needed on our site, no subscription, and a Microsoft receipt for easy corporate expensing.

Open full product page

Technical specifications

Technical specifications for procurement

Spec Implementation
Data Sovereignty Focus sessions and HUD state remain on-device; no cloud session store
Telemetry Status None; no analytics or sign-in for core timer behavior
Core Runtime Rust / Tauri with native Windows overlay APIs
Network Requirements Fully functional offline
Deployment Compatibility Windows 10 and 11 via Microsoft Store and direct purchase
Overlay behavior Always-on-top HUD designed not to steal keyboard focus
Strict Mode Optional session lock with pause/quit paths disabled until block ends