I'm not sure there's any way to assign specific dates to tasks or groups of tasks other than to select them and then pick them from the calendar/date wheel depending on what platform you're using MLO on. For reference, however, how often are you accurate when it comes to things being done on certain days or at certain times? I ask because one of the nice things about MLO is that it can easily help you prioritize things and get to them when you can. In my experience, though I do use start and due dates to help with that on some things, most things are really 'when I can get to them and in terms of their importance/urgency', not so much 'this needs to be done on Tuesday or we're all gonna die'.
Most of the attempts to precisely schedule things I see people do all tend to fall apart because things never go as planned. Relative urgency, importance, and priority, however, are more forgiving, flexible, and accurate for a good number of things I see people having trouble when it comes to trying to over structure them in terms of the date they'll be done on.
Hi, Emilio. If you are already
familiar with the Getting Things Done (GTD) methodology by David
Allen please delete this email. If you are not, perhaps you should check
one of his books out of a library and have a read. You don't have to follow
GTD to use MLO, and a lot of people (like me) start out following GTD and
then modify and customize it. But people who use MLO are usually trying to
spend less time managing their tasks and more time working on their
tasks, and GTD is one of the most effective ways of accomplishing that.
To me, assigning dates to tasks
is a trap. It's ok if the task is inherently dated, like registering for a
permit on the day on which registration opens. But if I am assigning a date
just to prevent a task from lingering, I am starting to dig myself into a
hole. Instead, I work on a task at or near the top of my to-do list. I use
MLO to ensure that the next thing I should work on gets high on the list.
The GTD methodology describes ways of doing that.
I am generally pretty accurate
in estimating how long a task will take, but I consistently underestimate
how much time I will spend on interruptions and unplanned tasks like
unjamming the printer. As a consequence, when I manage by dates, I end most
days with unfinished tasks. I end up spending time rescheduling when I
could have been getting one or two more things done. To make it worse, I
often end up rescheduling tasks onto days that are already overcommitted,
makingfor an even bigger reschedulin effort some day in the future.
I know that there are
definitely people who unexpected MLO who schedule their tasks, maybe one of
them will comment.
Just one hint: instead of
starting two copies of MLO try this: bring up one of your views, then hit
f3. This creates a new window with a snapshot of your view. Go back to the
main window and bring up the other view. You can tile the two windows next
to each other. The snapshot view has limited functionality but you can drag
tasks back and forth without needing a second instance.
-Dwight
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