This must be a dream….

Posted May 31st, 2011 in gtd by Michael

It’s really hard to believe, but The Hit List has been released to the public after 2 years (!!!) of “development”. When I first wrote about it I really thought this is going to be a great application… last years update was depressing already, but there was still hope in the Google Group.

Now that Poition Factory finally announced The Hit List 1.0 (not really announced, the only developer just put it online) I really wonder

  • if it will take another 2 years until an iPhone or even iPad application are released?
  • what the upgrade policy will be? How fast will bugs be fixed?

Do people still believe in such a company, with such a bad track record? How could anyone pay for the sync service? I personally would rather invest into Appigio Todo, which has released many many updates and a Web interface – and they had some time to fix bugs and improve the application.

…just my 2 cents regarding this 2 year saga….

Update:

Not even to mention all the features that the competition has and that should be the standard in todays productivity apps:

  • Importing and exporting tasks. At least from basic text files. My data belongs to me, not to your proprietary database format.
  • Adding tasks via E-Mail. Most times this is the application in front of me, so why not mail a task to myself?
  • Documented API’s and interfaces, so others can modify the data easily – think about Evernote or Dropbox, how well they integrate with tons of apps.

So yes, the user interface of THL is still charming, simple and because of the keyboard shortcuts very very powerful…. but again, the competition is way ahead….. about 2 years to be exact.

Why work doesn’t happen at work

Posted December 23rd, 2010 in gtd by Michael

Mainly because of  M&Ms… Managers & Meetings are the real problem to productivity. Check out the whole TED video if you are interested why work does not happen at work:

So where do you work?

(via ted.com)

Abhakeln

Posted December 20th, 2010 in gtd by Michael

Papa, wir müssen noch ins Kaffeehaus gehen. Dann ist das mit dem Lutscher endlich abgehakelt.

Früh übt sich…

This is definitely not going to be a hit!

Posted July 5th, 2010 in gtd by Michael

Long long time ago I wrote about The Hit List – that it is going to be the best GTD software on earth.

A little after that I wrote about how to not write software and especially about how to not communicate with users.

Finally it is time to say that The Hit List is not going to be a hit…. let me quote some statistics from CAS:

Last tweet: December, 2009
Last forum post: December, 2009
Last blog post: September, 2009
Last significant (non-fix) upgrade to THL: May, 2009

To me this looks like THL is finally dead…. too bad, would have had a great future!

RIP, The Hit List!

But what have you shipped?

Posted June 1st, 2010 in gtd by Michael

What have you done with your connection skills that has been worthy of criticism, that moved the dial and that changed the world?

Go, do that.

5 simple steps

Posted May 26th, 2010 in gtd by Michael

If just everyone @work would follow these 5 steps….:

1. Go, make something happen.
2. Do work you’re proud of.
3. Treat people with respect.
4. Make big promises and keep them.
5. Ship it out the door.
When in doubt, see #1.

Source

GTD solves *all* your problems

Posted April 8th, 2010 in gtd by Michael

(from JoyOfTech)

How to not develop software

Posted March 16th, 2010 in gtd by Michael
A while ago I wrote about The Hit List – a clean, powerful GTD application for the Mac. Over a year passed since that posting so I’d love to give an updated about The Hit List and the development of that particular application.
So, what happened in the last year? Well, not a lot:

THL is still beta

The Hit List lets you plan, forget, then act when the time is right. (source)
That’s what they write on their homepage, but obviously the time is not right yet – THL is still beta. Over year ago I wrote that the developer reads the forums and listens to his users…. this is not the case anymore – there are no frequent updates and the developer (Potion Factory seems to be a single-person company) does not respond to mails. The forums are full of complaints and issues….

THL for the iPhone is vaporware

All the developer released so far is a screenshot, that can be created in Photoshop or using Interface Builder in a few minutes… until now there is no sign of an real, existing iPhone application, something that is really needed for a fully-operational GTD system.

The competition….

Enough complaining about THL itself, what I really wanted to write about is why I think that THL is not going to survive with the current development model… in the last year the competition did actually develop and improve their products, there have been releases and they learned from their mistakes. For example my favorite iPhone GTD application “ToDo” had a few releases and improved the application over time. Toodledo also improved their Web interface and added quite a lot of features.
It is unrealistic to think that Potion Factory will release a working, reliable and proven iPhone application from the beginning… there will be bugs and flaws which have to be fixed after the release. No app is perfect when released.
Also the competition is really really strong and feature rich. For example 2do or even Toodledo‘s own iPhone app. Both are shiny, stable and actively maintained. On the desktop Omnifocus and Things are way ahead THL right now – THL was great a year ago, it is old fashioned today.

My recommendation

While THL for the Mac is still one of the best GTD apps out there (it’s focus on shortcuts is great!) I do not recommend it anymore. There does not seem to be any development and without an iPhone counterpart (or an open API so independent developers can fill that gap) it is not useable as GTD system. All sync options are hacks and do not work reliable (check the forums for details). Do not invest your money right now… but maybe next year?

Bundles: The good and the bad

Posted June 4th, 2009 in mac by Michael

In the Mac world so called “Application Bundles” exist – this means that about a dozen commercial software packages are sold together for a pretty cheap price (usually $50 instead of more than $500!) for a limited time. Experience has shown that there are one or two packages that are pretty “strong” and try to convince the users to buy the package, the other applications are rather unknown, but might also be useful. But it pays off.
For example I recently bought my “upgrade” to Parallels Desktop 4.0 – the whole bundle including other software cost me about the same as just the upgrade directly from Parallels. So even if I don’t use any of the other applicatins included in the bundle it does not really matter, as it did not cost me anything.

Now that I already bought 4 bundles (from MacHeist and MuPromo) I have a lot of commercial software to test and rant about… and trust me, there are great differences when it comes down to support, updates and quality. Therefore I want to write about some of the top notch applications included in the bundles:

1Password
1Password is still the most used application on my Mac and I’m very happy that it was included in the first MacHeist bundle. The password manager includes support for all major browsers on OSX, syncs its data flawlessly across an iDisk and “just works”. It allows me to “remember” very complicated passwords in a secure way and it also synchronizes to the iPhone, so I have my passwords with me all the time.
They release new versions of their software very regularly (usually every 3-4 weeks) including bug fixes and new features. Recently they came up with the best WiFi iPhone sync process I every saw – 1Password automatically detects the iPhone using Bonjour and synchronizes automatically. That’s how every software should sync with the iPhone – flawlessly and automatic!
1Password is highly recommended to every Mac user to manage passwords! And all other application developers should have a look at how easy it is to sync across Macs and to the iPhone.

Parallels Desktop
This was the reason to buy the first package from MuPromo – it included a cheap license of Parallels Desktop 3 and the recent bundle included the new 4.0 release. A great deal to get a license for an amazing piece of software that allows me to run Windows on the Mac. It just works and got even better after I upgraded my Mac to include 4GB of RAM. Highly recommended to test Websites in IE or execute Windows-only applications.

The Hit List
The recent MacHeist bundle included The Hit List, a GTD app I already wrote about, as their main application. While still beta the developers are very active and release a new version every few weeks. They also listen to the forums and communicate with their users – and because the MacHeist sold more than 88.000 bundles I’m sure they receive a lot of support requests these days ;)
Nevertheless the very promising application is still unfinished – to be a real, serious GTD application it misses two featuers – a rock-solid way to sync tasks between different machines and an iPhone counterpart. But until now, long time after the Heist, there is no iPhone application available, rendering The Hit List pretty useless (at least for me). So I’m still waiting (together with a lot of other folks) for the release of an Hit List iPhone application…. hopefully they look into 1Password to learn about synchronization!

Espresso
The article is named “the good and the bad”, now let’s talk about the bad one… MacRabbit released Espresso 1.0 just before the last MacHeist took place, but to be honest this application is still in “heavy beta mode”. It tries to be an source code editor which matches up with Coda, TextMate or BBEdit and it was one of the reasons for buying the bundle.
Unfortunately the application is not anywhere being ready for production. While the overall approach looks great it lacks required features, that you would expect from a source code editor. For example Espresso only supports syntax highlighting for a few languages, the application crashes too often, and I can’t even enter the ^ character, which is used quite often within regular expressions. Even worse, the support does not reply to bug reports at all – see the forums (i.e. here) for details. Just on a side note – they don’t seem to participate in their own forums at all.
So how about updates? Well, there have been some, but neither did they fix a lot of bugs nor did they bring Espresso anywhere near a serious text editor.
Unfortunately Espresso has been a waste of money and I’ll stick with the free TextWrangler instead.

Voila! and MoneyWell
Now that I complained about the Espresso support being not responsive at all I want to highlight two great software companies where the support is just amazing!
Voila v2.0 enhances the OSX built in screenshot feature and allows editing, rotating, modifying screenshots without any need to fire up Pixelmator. There are still some bugs and missing features (copy to clipboard!), but the support wrote back within minutes on all my requests!

The same applies to MoneyWell, a simple but powerful personal finance application – the support wrote back within minutes (from the iPhone) and they participate actively in their own forums. That’s how it should be!

The summary :)

  • Bundles are great! They are even so successful that there will be a bundle every month!
  • Developers should listen and respond to their customers – in the forums and via mail. Pre and Post sales!
  • Developers have to release often and react fast on bugs – otherwise the majority of the users will move away and a great opportunity is lost.
  • Mac bundles can bring a lot of users to unknown applications, which helps the developers to build up a user base and users to get cheap software directly from the developers.

Practical Getting Things Done tricks

Posted November 12th, 2008 in gtd by Michael

A while ago I started using GTD with my two tools of choice – Toodledo and Todo – and so far I’m very satisfied with the “results” and the progress. Time to recap my experiences with GTD, the tools and the process as it might help others, you, to get up to speed with Getting Things Done more quickly. Please note that these recommendations reflect my personal experience when adopting myself to Getting Things Done using modern tools, compared to paper files and folders as described in the de-facto standard book from David Allen.

It works!
Now that I used GTD for some time I can really say it works – my friends and peers sometimes might say “he is writing everything down – he can’t remember anything on his own”, but that’s not what should hinder you from using GTD. Writing everything down in a structured way really frees the brain from thinking about things it should not think about. Some of the lists I have are very long but I’m confident at any time that I know what I have to do so I don’t have to think about it anymore. Time you save and can spend on thinking about more interesting stuff.

Not everything should got to the “next actions” folder.
Per GTD definition almost everything should go through the Inbox – and in the first weeks I discovered that most stuff immediately after that goes to the next-actions list. Which does not make sense for two reasons:
1) If you next-actions list is very long you have to remember manually what tasks are more important than others, which wastes Brain-Processing-Unit (BPU) cycles.
2) If stuff remains in the next-actions list for a week or so it was no next-action in the first place.
After some time I became more confident that moving stuff to other categories also works fine and that I can also move items off next-actions as needed.

Do not review the inbox in the subway.
At least for me doing reviews of my list in the subway did not work out that well – most of my tasks are somewhat computer related – sending a mail, doing some quick research of a Web site, fixing a script or updating some text. These and a lot of other 2-minute items which require a computer do not work out in the subway. (Sorry Apple, but writing long mails on the iPhone is not what I want to do!)
Doing the review in front of a computer is way more efficient and faster, at least for me. And it is more efficient than to move those items from “in” to “next” before executing them…

There is also a medium priority.
In the beginning all my tasks had either no priority (90%) or a high priority (the remaining 10%) which does not really add any benefit regarding sorting. I see this problem as related to iTunes ratings – I don’t want to rate poor songs with a single star, as they don’t deserve it… so most songs remain unrated. Great songs on the other side get 5 stars, as they are great, aren’t they?
What I want to say is – find your way to use priorities – i.e. high if your life depends on it and it had to be done yesterday, medium for stuff that can is urgent, but not already overdue, low for important things and no priority for all other stuff. But use more than just high and none.

The context can save your ass (multiple times).
Use the context to store meta information about the tasks, i.e. “manager”, “girlfriend”, “call”… not for everything, but where it makes sense. That way you can easily access all items you want to discuss with your manager independent of the list they are in. And you can do that right now, as needed. Works great if your manager stops by and asks something – you can, within seconds, tell him all the new gadgets you need *right now* to survive your job! :)
Finally Appigo’s Todo also supports the context and tags it really makes sense to use that information as well!

Waiting-for is really useful.
The second-most used list is waiting-for – in there I drop stuff that I have delegated, where input from others or action of others is required. This is great as I cannot forget to follow up on actions or input – no more slipping of deadlines because there was no follow up on time. Also this list tells you what others are working on for you (or should be working on…).

Review the list regularly. The full list.
To have a working GTD system it is also important that you review your full list regularly. It is not sufficient to just review the next actions and the Inbox, you have to go through every single item at least once a week. This helps you to clean up the waiting for list and maybe some other actions have been resolved in the meantime. Also it helps you to be confident that your system works and you have everything “in there”.

Delete tasks if needed!
When you do the regular review also remove tasks – don’t let something stick around just because you added it a while ago. Feel free to remove things as needed. Especially if something is on the next actions list for quite some time – drop it or at least move it to any other list.

Is it actionable? If not – rewrite or drop it (or put it on a list).
I also learned the hard way that actions have to be actionable – which makes it sometimes hard but is a good chance to clean up your projects. On the other side there are some items which don’t make sense to be actionable – i.e. “buy milk” – I don’t want to write it that way, instead have a groceries and a shopping list, where you know it is a list with items that are similar important and that are no actions.

Once again: GTD works!
As I already stated on top – Getting Things Done works and will make you more productive and save you a lot of time. Getting started is not easy but there are good resources out there that help you (I can recommend this one).
Also it is important to find your way – there is no wrong or right way of doing it and also GTD is not a strict process but about giving you a general idea of how it might work – then go ahead and adopt the process as needed!

I hope these practical hints helped you implementing GTD on your electronic device of choice, iPhone preferred :)