Yanko Design

This Minimal “Zero-AI” Macropad Was Built for the Way Freelancers Really Work

Our obsession with productivity has created a technology landscape that values data over discipline. We are encouraged to believe the path to better work is paved with more features, more integrations, and more automation, leading to tools that are powerful yet overwhelming. These systems promise efficiency by tracking our every move, analyzing habits, and optimizing our schedules. But in doing so, they can strip away our agency, turning the human process of creative work into a set of metrics managed by an algorithm. The result is a strange irony where the tools we build to manage time quietly end up consuming it.

The Freelancer Macropad by Studio Playground is a quiet rebellion born out of the subculture of moonlighting and freelancing. It is a tool built on the belief that awareness is more valuable than automation. Its simple interface, a single knob and a large key, puts the user in complete control, demanding a moment of physical intention to log the passage of time. Creator Shivam Dehinwal could have easily made this a dream device for data enthusiasts by using AI to track time seamlessly in the background. Instead, he made the deliberate choice to build a tool that requires your participation, arguing that the most powerful productivity feature is your own focused attention.

Designer: Studio Playground (Shivam Dehinwal)

For a salaried employee, time is the employer’s concern. The clock is managed by structure: a calendar of meetings, a fixed start and end to the day, a paycheck that arrives regardless of whether Tuesday was three hours of deep work or three hours of inbox archaeology. Freelancing dismantles that entirely. Every hour sold carries a direct monetary weight, and context switching between a branding project for one client and a deck for another can silently bleed a day into an unaccountable blur. The Macropad’s functionality is distilled for one purpose, to track your allocation of time, and that singular focus is precisely what makes it suited to the freelance condition.

 

The body sits in a calm, muted blue against a cream-toned chassis, with a yellow flower-shaped rotary knob that reads as playful and precise rather than gimmicky. Using the knob you can switch between projects, and using the spacebar you can pause and play the time counter. A small OLED display to the left surfaces the active project name and elapsed time without tipping into information overload. You only need a computer during setup to add projects, and after that the Macropad runs independently from a phone, power bank, or computer. When you need the log, a long press of the spacebar outputs a time receipt directly into any text editor of your choice, a Google Doc, a Word file, even an email body.

Still in beta, the Macropad has already surfaced different modalities of use, and those insights are actively driving further development of the project. Pricing and broader availability remain open questions, and the product’s trajectory will depend on whether enough people see dedicated physical hardware as a ritual worth investing in. You can follow progress at Shivam’s Instagram, @shivam_playground. I suspect the people who need this most will know it the moment they see it, because what the Macropad quietly hands back is something the app ecosystem has been slowly taking away for years: a real sense of ownership over your own time.

Exit mobile version