Foto Timer was originally written because I no longer wanted to count the seconds when I took photographs of the stars. With the input and help of many people, it then became a more or less universal interval timer. Foto Timer can be used for almost every stage in the making of a photograph...
Can beep at regular intervals (0s-9h)
Stops after defined time (1s-9h) or counts forever
Can "chain" processes. When one process ends, the next one in the chain starts automatically.
Can drive any external hardware via the serial port
Stores up to 32767 processes
Has big Start and Stop buttons
Can attach notes to individual processes. Those notes can also be accessed through the "Memo Pad" and "Palm Desktop" applications.
Can write a log file entry when processes start and stop. The log file can be accessed through the "Memo Pad" and "Palm Desktop" applications.
Can block the hard keys on your Palm so you can have it in your pocket
Freeware!
Foto Timer has been downloaded over 6000 times so far! I would like to thank everybody for their ideas, their feedback, and for using Foto Timer, of course. I"m much obliged.
Foto Timer has grown ever since its birth, and will probably continue to do so. As of version 2.3, I replaced the readme.txt file with a real Foto Timer manual
Wei Chong has written a step-by-step example of how he uses Foto Timer to develop black & white film.
Foto Timer 2.4 English version
I do no longer build German versions. If anybody wants to do so, please drop me an email. Ich baue keine deutsche Version mehr. Wer das tun möchte, kann mir gerne eine Mail schreiben.
Foto Timer is compatible with Palm OS 3.x, 4.x and 5.x. Foto Timer needs about 53kB of memory.
During its life, Foto Timer changed significantly. If you don"t need specific functions, you might want to download an older version. They are usually smaller and run on older devices.
ATTENTION: Do NOT just overwrite a current version with an older one! Do ALWAYS delete later versions before installing older ones. You usually can not use your process data on an older version.
Please refer to the version history for information about specific versions and features.
"Foto" is the German word for "photo". I guess I just didn"t think when I chose the name...
Many thanks to Thomas Stingl, Eric Mathieu, David Buckle, Snorre Selmer, Carsten Zahout, Thomas Rauers, Jochen Ackermann, Michael Liczbanski, Materne Linder, Andrew Price, Roman Rohleder, Ron Shenk and Philippe Vuille for help, inspiration and debugging.