In this guide
The recommended layout
Remote workers need a dashboard that balances focus (deep work tools) with awareness (team availability, meetings). A two-column layout works well:
| Left — focus & structure | Right — awareness & context |
|---|---|
| Pomodoro timer | World clock (team time zones) |
| Todoist — today's priorities | Google Calendar — today's meetings |
| Habit tracker | Gmail (unread count) |
| Scratch Pad — daily log | Spotify (ambient music) |
Create a dashboard called "Remote" and add each widget. Enable a background image (Unsplash nature photos work beautifully) and ambient sounds for a calm, focused atmosphere.
World clock — know when your team is online
The single biggest friction in distributed work is time zone math. Pinodock's clock widget can display multiple time zones simultaneously. Set up clocks for each location where your team works:
| Label | Time zone | Use case |
|---|---|---|
| 🇦🇺 Sydney (You) | AEST (UTC+10) | Your local time |
| 🇺🇸 San Francisco | PST (UTC-8) | Engineering team |
| 🇬🇧 London | GMT (UTC+0) | Design team |
| 🇯🇵 Tokyo | JST (UTC+9) | Support team |
| 🇮🇳 Bangalore | IST (UTC+5:30) | Backend team |
At a glance, you can see whether it's reasonable to send a Slack message that expects a quick reply or whether you should write an async document instead. This simple visual cue fundamentally changes how you communicate — you stop interrupting people in their off-hours.
Pomodoro and ambient mode for deep work
Remote work's biggest advantage is the ability to do deep work — but only if you protect it. Pinodock's Pomodoro timer sits in the corner of your dashboard and provides structure:
- 25-minute blocks — the classic Pomodoro for task-switching days
- 50-minute blocks — extended focus for writing specs or documentation
- 90-minute blocks — full deep work sessions for complex problem-solving
The timer continues running in the background even when you close the new tab. When it rings, the tab title flashes. Pair the timer with Ambient Mode (⊙) to hide all widgets during your focus block — just the clock, a beautiful background, and ambient sounds.
Today's meetings from Google Calendar
The Google Calendar widget shows today's events, read directly from your open calendar.google.com tab. For remote workers, the calendar is especially critical because meetings are the primary source of synchronous interaction.
The widget shows event titles, times, and a color-coded visual timeline. At a glance, you can answer the question every remote worker asks dozens of times a day: "How much uninterrupted time do I have before my next call?"
If the answer is 25 minutes, start a Pomodoro. If it's 5 minutes, triage Slack. The calendar widget makes this decision instant.
Communication shortcuts — Slack, Zoom, and more
Remote workers context-switch between communication tools constantly. Set up URL aliases in Settings → Shortcuts to make them one-keystroke accessible:
| Alias | URL | Use case |
|---|---|---|
slack | https://your-org.slack.com | Open Slack web app |
zoom | https://zoom.us/my/your-personal-room | Start your personal Zoom room |
meet | https://meet.google.com | Google Meet |
notion | https://www.notion.so/your-workspace | Team knowledge base |
linear | https://linear.app/your-team | Issue tracker |
loom | https://www.loom.com/my-videos | Async video updates |
Also add your most-visited Slack channels as dock items. Pin https://your-org.slack.com/archives/C01234TEAM to the dock with a custom emoji and label ("🔥 #incidents", "💬 #general"). One click opens the exact channel.
Daily habits for remote discipline
Without the structure of a physical office, remote workers need to create their own rituals. Pinodock's habit tracker sits on your dashboard and shows daily completion:
| Habit | Why it matters for remote work |
|---|---|
| ☀️ Morning routine | Signals the start of the workday — replaces the commute |
| 🚶 Mid-day walk | Breaks the screen marathon — improves afternoon focus |
| 📝 End-of-day log | Write 3 sentences about what you accomplished — creates closure |
| 🧘 Screen break (hourly) | Prevents the 8-hour uninterrupted screen marathon |
| 📖 Learning (30 min) | Professional development doesn't happen by osmosis when remote |
The habit tracker shows a row of circles — filled when completed, empty when not. Seeing it every time you open a tab creates a gentle nudge. Over weeks, the visual streak becomes motivation in itself.
Backgrounds and ambient sounds
Remote workers stare at their new tab hundreds of times a day. Making it beautiful isn't vanity — it's environment design. Pinodock supports nine background sources:
| Source | Best for |
|---|---|
| Curated (40 hand-picked photos) | Consistent, beautiful defaults |
| Unsplash (topic search) | "nature" or "minimal" for a calm vibe |
| GIPHY (animated GIFs) | Lo-fi aesthetic, subtle motion |
| Custom folder (rotate your own photos) | Personal photos for a homey feel |
| Gradient or solid color | Minimal, distraction-free |
Pair backgrounds with the ambient sound player (rain, café, fireplace, forest, ocean) to create a virtual workspace atmosphere. Many remote workers report that "café sounds + nature background" is the closest substitute for the ambient energy of working in a coffee shop.
Workspace presets for context switching
Remote workers often wear multiple hats — coding in the morning, managing in the afternoon, learning in the evening. Use workspace presets (Settings → Shortcuts → Workspace Presets) to open a set of URLs in one click:
| Preset | URLs opened | Shortcut |
|---|---|---|
| 🔨 Deep Work | GitHub, VS Code Web, terminal docs | Cmd+1 |
| 📧 Comms | Gmail, Slack, Google Calendar, Zoom | Cmd+2 |
| 📊 Review | Jira, Confluence, analytics dashboard | Cmd+3 |
| 📖 Learning | Coursera, YouTube, documentation site | Cmd+4 |
Instead of manually opening 4–5 tabs when you shift from coding to meetings, press one shortcut and all the relevant tabs appear. This reduces the friction of context switching and prevents the "33 open tabs" problem that plagues remote workers.
The remote worker dashboard solves the ambient problems of distributed work: it tells you what time it is for your team, structures your focus blocks, keeps your habits visible, and makes communication tools one keystroke away. It won't replace the energy of an office — but it creates a digital environment that's deliberately designed for how you actually work.
→ Nine ways to set a background on your new tab
→ Build better habits directly in your new tab