I'm Michal, and I built Quiet Control on my own.
For years I had the same problem most people do: I thought I was working hard, but I never really knew where my time went. I'd sit at the computer for eight or nine hours and feel busy the whole time. When I finally started measuring it, the truth was uncomfortable - real, focused work was maybe two hours a day. The rest was tabs, messages, videos, and noise.
The other half of the problem was that I was always searching for answers. The perfect method. The Holy Grail of exactly what to do and how. I read, I watched, I planned. But I wasn't actually doing the work. A good day here, a motivated week there, then life would get in the way and everything I'd started would quietly fall apart. Nothing stuck.
The answer was never another method. I already knew enough. I just wasn't doing it.
So I built the tools I needed. A timer that shows the truth about my focus and protects it. A habit tracker that holds the days in between - habits set for the hard days, so progress doesn't depend on motivation and I actually finish what I start.
What changed wasn't reading more or finding the perfect technique. It was deciding to actually do the thing. Every day. Even when there was no visible progress yet. The work was uncomfortable - it still is - but discomfort turns out to be where the things I actually want live. Practice over theory. Show up before you feel ready.
Quiet Control is the opposite of most apps. It isn't built to grab your attention; it's built to give it back. No ads, no data harvesting, no dark patterns, no notifications begging you to come back. One person, no investors, no growth-at-all-costs. Just two small tools that respect your time.
The mission is simple: give people the tools and the know-how to live meaningful lives. Not louder ones.
If these two small tools - the Timer and the Habit Tracker - help you live a little more deliberately, they've done their job.
- Michal, Quiet Control