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Coffeetime 0.99 -

If you are looking for a productivity nuke, stick with your timers and blockers. But if you want a gentle nudge to look out the window while your French press steeps, CoffeeTime 0.99 is the perfect imperfect brew.

For users of the niche but beloved scheduling and break-management tool CoffeeTime , the rollout of version 0.99 is not just a minor patch note—it is a milestone a decade in the making. For the uninitiated, CoffeeTime (originally a side project by indie developer Martin E. "Red-Eye" Kessler) is a cross-platform utility designed to combat screen fatigue and cognitive drift. Unlike aggressive "parental control" blockers or rigid Pomodoro timers, CoffeeTime uses ambient system cues to suggest micro-breaks. coffeetime 0.99

Available now for Linux, macOS, and Windows via the developer’s Patreon or GitHub releases. If you are looking for a productivity nuke,

It feels finished. It feels warm.

That missing 1% has become a running joke in the community. Reddit threads are filled with speculation that the 1.0 release will include a hidden "Pour Over" mode that integrates with smart mugs, or perhaps a neural interface that detects caffeine blood levels via webcam. Having run CoffeeTime 0.99 for 48 hours, the differences are invisible—which is exactly the point. The app no longer stutters when waking from sleep mode. The transition between "Focus" and "Break" is now a seamless gradient rather than a hard cut. For the uninitiated, CoffeeTime (originally a side project

The software gained a cult following in the early 2020s because of its "Barista Logic"—an algorithm that learns whether you are deep in a flow state (coding, writing, designing) or doom-scrolling. It doesn’t interrupt you with a modal pop-up; it simply dims your screen 2% and plays the soft sound of a steam wand. The message is subtle: “You’ve earned a sip.” Version 0.99, released quietly to beta testers this week, represents the "Release Candidate." According to the changelog, this build contains no new features. Instead, it focuses on stability and ritual .

Version 1.0 estimated release: "When the code feels warm, not hot."