TurnedOnTimesView makes it easy to track when a device was active and which programs were used. It parses system runtime records and organizes activity into personal, general and application-specific views so you can inspect total screen time, session counts, start and end times, and app-level engagement. Filters and quick searches let you narrow results by date range, duration or process name, while sortable columns and timeline views reveal recurring patterns. The tool is lightweight and built for Windows desktops and laptops, and it provides simple export options for cross-platform review. Reports can be exported to CSV for sharing or deeper analysis, and exported files are readable on Android tools if you want to review summaries on mobile. The workflow emphasizes clarity: no hidden services, minimal resource use and fast access to historical activity. That makes it useful for individuals tracking personal habits, parents supervising family devices, and IT professionals auditing workstation uptime and background processes. Use session-level details to set healthier device habits, compare periods to spot spikes in activity, or produce concise logs for reporting. The interface focuses on readable output and fast filtering rather than complex dashboards, delivering actionable insights with minimal setup and reliable, auditable records.




This app does a lot right, especially the layout. I’ve found myself using it daily to organize tasks. Only issue is that sometimes it lags a bit. But I still think it’s worth using!