The heatmap you'll actually want to share
A GitHub-style graph for everything you do — not just code. It's yours, it's private, and it looks great when you decide to show it off.
dev.log
You did more today than your git history shows. Log your wins, frustrations, and the occasional 11pm prod fire in 10 seconds — and watch your real work light up like a GitHub graph.
If you've ever stared at that question at 6pm — or blanked when your manager asked what you worked on last quarter — it's not you. It's that your real work is invisible.
Your commit graph only counts code you pushed. It doesn't count the code review that saved a release, the two hours you spent hunting a race condition, the teammate you unblocked, or the incident you quietly put out. The busiest weeks often leave the emptiest graphs.
dev.log counts all of it.
It's a command line, not a form. Type the command you already think in:
/win shipped the export button
/ugh fought a flaky test for 2h
/til Postgres has a FILTER clause
/mood fried
Or just type a line — it's a task by default. PRO Lazy day? Tap the 🎙 mic and just talk.
Your day lights up a cell. Days become weeks become a wall of green proof that yes, you have in fact been doing the work.
Look back any time and actually see your scope. Some days you ship a feature. Some days you survive a flaky test suite. Both count.
A GitHub-style graph for everything you do — not just code. It's yours, it's private, and it looks great when you decide to show it off.
/win, /task, /til, /ugh, /mood — log by typing the command you already think in. No boards, no due dates nagging you.
Track the rough days too. dev.log shows your mood alongside your work, so over time you can actually see the patterns — gently, no dashboards to babysit.
Too lazy to type? Tap the mic and just say it — even "slash win, shipped the export button." Hands-free logging for the fried days.
Dump a messy paragraph at the end of the day (type or dictate) and let the AI split it into clean, tagged entries. Get a weekly recap — the start of a brag doc that writes itself.
Your log is yours. We don't sell it, we don't show it to your manager, and sharing is always your choice (and just an image).
dev.log grows with its community. Each milestone we hit together unlocks the next chapter. No roadmap theater, no "coming soon" forever — real gates, real features.
Nothing is built yet — and that's intentional. We're gathering the first 100 developers who feel this problem before writing a line of app code. You're early.
One screen, fast slash-command logging, your heatmap, streaks, and AI logging for Pro. Mobile + desktop. The smallest thing that'll change how you see your week.
Paste a task link from ClickUp, Jira, Linear, Trello, or GitHub and dev.log ties it to your entry. MCP support so your AI tools can log alongside you. Smarter, cheaper AI.
The case builder turns your history into a promotion-ready brag doc, mapped to what review committees actually look for. Plus honest, kind insights on where to grow next.
Want v1 sooner? Tell a friend who's tired of feeling invisible. 💚
$0
/win, /mood, …)$7/mo · or $60/yr
$149 one-time · 3 years of Pro, then 50% off for life
You're funding the build and getting in first. 50 founders, then this tier closes for good. No credit card to start Free — it's genuinely useful forever.
Nope. dev.log is a log, not a to-do list. No boards, no due dates, no time tracking. It's for recording what you did, not planning what you'll do.
You type commands like a terminal: /win, /task, /til (today I learned), /ugh (the bad days), /mood. Type /help for the cheatsheet. Or just type a line — it's a task by default.
That's what the 🎙 mic is for (Pro). Tap it and talk — it'll even understand "slash win, shipped the export button." Hands-free logging for the fried days.
Only you. Private by default. We don't sell your data and we'll never show it to your manager. Sharing is opt-in and just exports an image.
That's v1 — it starts at 100 developers on the waitlist. Join and help us get there.
Because every developer has tailed a dev.log. Also: a developer's log. We thought it fit.
Ten seconds a day. One wall of proof. Your work, finally visible.