That’s why I looked into something simple and came across a command-line task manager. It strips productivity down to the essentials—using the command-line to get things done through text-based ...
Executes commands only once at a specified time. Supports natural language input for time specifications (e.g., "at noon," "at now + 2 hours"). Integrates seamlessly with the atd (at daemon) service, ...
The at command is a versatile utility that allows users to schedule a command or script to be executed at a specified time in the future. It is particularly useful for running one-time jobs, such as ...
We're big proponents of "work smarter, not harder" here at XDA, and that means figuring out how to automate as much of our ...