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This is more a reply to the comments from John Smith.
I regard myself as a techie, which according to your comments suggests I don't fit into the definition of a normal human being :)
I'm not sure if that makes me some kind of super human, or a weird tech geek, either way, I take it as a compliment.
I'm sorry that you find the learning curve for MLO so challenging.
I agree that MLO could probably benefit from a little more in the help department and it always better to make software accessible.
MLO is definitely powerful and configurable and no doubt learning all the features does take time.
Personally I found that with MLO I could start small. I could learn to use the basic task functionality without much issue. Gradually I learned the more advanced functionality, but MLO did a good job of hiding all this stuff away until I was ready.
I've tried probably half of the software and services on your list of competition. Many were easy to use and no doubt would appeal more to a wider public. However in every case I found them either too limiting or I had to bend my work flow and way of thinking to fit the product.
With MLO I can configure it to fit me.
Your argument is principally that MLO will fail due to lack of mass market appeal, or that it is inferior because it will be too difficult for the average person.
It's a typically modern view that products must conform to the lowest common denominator in order appeal to the maximum audience. That’s the kind of thinking that, for example, results in big corporations creating some truly dreadful, but highly profitable TV shows.
MLO does require some investment of your time. It does require learning. It’s highly specialized, and won’t appeal to everyone.
MLO as a company is small but it’s sustained itself for 15 years so far.
Not every product needs to be all things to all people, but if you can't get on with MLO, you have a big list of other software that might meet your individual needs better.
MLO appeals to a niche market, and that’s fine by me.
Dear all
For me, if a task has a Due Date - when that date comes round, it’ll either
If a task doesn’t have a Due Date - it’s not time-critical, and is therefore a Someday task
I still don’t use automatic sorting - figuring out how it works is a Someday task
My Outline has some 2,000 active tasks (of about 20,000 in total)
Each year I manage 4 or 5 large projects of some 500 tasks each, plus dozens of smaller projects and routines
I love that MLO lets me organise my life the way I want to, and doesn’t force me to work to someone else’s plan
Regards
Wol
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I refer you the window which opens when you hit the three-dot icon to the right of the Context field in the Properties pane. I'm not certain but I believe that may be the same as the Alt/L popup.
On January 12, 2018 07:43:16 "John . Smith" <shi...@gmail.com> wrote:
Dwight - which popup are you talking about?The popup that appears when you start typing in the Context field (in the Properties pane on the right of the scree) is irritatingly small on my (4K) screen, but I cant find a way to enlarge it.If you meant just the Alt-L popup, thanks I have adjusted.Christoph - have you considered putting Context tags into Hotkeys?They are a great way to remove as well as add tags.Personally I only ever use the Context field to add new Context - a rare event.I prefer hotkeys or to right-click on the Context column which I have added to the main area of the screen.SRhyse - I have read but I disagree with much of what you say. I have no stomach for further ideological debate with you however.Daniel - Just to say that the reality is that we users quickly invest a vast amount of our TIME in learning, customising and entering data into their task management software e.g. MLO. If you value your time, time equates to money and given how much customisation is possible (and arguably required!) to set up MLO, most MLO users are huge investors in MLO and the actual money price paid for the software soon becomes irrelevant in comparison. Moreover, unless you actually want to Spring Clean occasionally, the personal cost of jumping ship is likely to be significant.
On Thursday, January 11, 2018 at 10:42:52 PM UTC, daniel wrote:
I like your response. I have no animosity of people wanting things to be a certain way. I may not understand it, and certainly not from their perspective, but I do not mind them wanting it. I'd like to have personal programming done for me also However I do get agitated when some really bash the program, probably more so for just it being one more stream of negativity into my day than anything else. However I am a MLO loyalist. I think some are just unwilling to bend or adapt. I understand it, I manage 43 people in a multi-million dollar business. I am sometimes the fire breathing personification of I want things the way I want them and since I am paying you to provide me with a service its unacceptable that I cannot have what i want! (that is directed at vendors, but every once in a while an employee as well ) However the scale is much different. This is piece of software that cost me less than 100 dollars US and requires pocket change to upkeep. I do not have the right to demand more from Andrey and CO. He offered a product, I purchased, I received the value of what I bought. I'm happy with it, I want more people to love it and use it. Beyond that...to the ones that do not like it, that is ok, wish you the best, hope something else works out for you. In the meantime I'm going back to work.
On Thu, Jan 11, 2018 at 5:24 PM, SRhyse <srh...@gmail.com> wrote:
The original language of GTD is loose enough that ‘context’ is just a distinction you make between different types of tasks to make your lists smaller and easier so you don’t feel overwhelmed, and to put similar things in the same space so you can do one after another if they have similar requirements to get down. The way the David Allen company has continued coaching it is entirely in line with that too. ‘Waiting For’ and ‘Someday Maybe’ are both used as contexts to them. I’m not concerned with what is or isn’t GTD, but if you’re going to talk about GTD, it’s always been that way, and they’ve always been open about that. If you’re not using entirely separate flat lists, ‘context’ is just a tag meant to organize data on another level that isn’t hierarchy. Plenty of people now use energy levels and time as contexts as mentioned.
I personal don’t find it hard to enter contexts because I keep their names short, and their numbers few. You can have a context that for you means “things I would like to considering doing someday,” or “things I would only like to do when I’m tired,” but you don’t have to name them in that way. I’ve varied over the years, but I tag things I’m waiting for with ‘@w’ or just a ‘w’. If it’s something that won’t take any brain power to do, I consider it shallow work and use @s or s. All of my contexts work like that, and I don’t have too many because that usually serves as ways of hiding things so I don’t see them, which is the opposite of effectively managing and making decisions on them. I also don’t do ‘someday’ in contexts because anything not on a todo view or with a context is a pipe dream, and if it isn’t, I’ll just tag it and have it show up when it should based on date or sequence or dependency. I’ve actually found it better to store that stuff outside of MLO because at that point it’s just reference notes and past thinking, though MLO’s Markdown support and potential for a ‘note’ designation may bring it back in for me. Having contexts parse out as things are typed is simple in this case, as is clicking on a context to assign it to one or more tasks. Moving it under an existing task with that context also works, and in the very off chance it doesn’t, you just change the context of that task.
And to Dwight: I wouldn’t consider you trying to discuss things with people as defensive. If people bring up issues and requests on a public forum, discussing them is kind of the point. That is the only point of a forum. That is what a forum is. Discussing something doesn’t mean blindly agreeing with it or leaving it unexamined. If someone said they’d like MLO to have a field for ‘dogs’ in it, the best response probably wouldn’t be “sure thing! We’ll add it to the list,” particularly not if that user went on for 4 or more years saying MLO was silly and unacceptable and stupidly clumsy for not having implemented the ‘dog’ feature that made no sense and had no real utility, and was requested by a user that by their own admission no longer used the program. If that user wasn’t willing to take half a second to tag something with ‘dog’, they also apparently don’t value their desired ‘dog’ functionality very much. Bending the development team over backwards to add in dog-like functionality seems like a waste of resources, and trying to discuss that first would appear to be the more fruitful course of action than burning more time and money.
Best,
S
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The automatic sorting ("computed score priority") is one of the few
things that really need to be improved/changed in MLO because. The
problem is that it equates tasks without date (i.e. my "someday/maybe")
with tasks that are due today (my most important tasks). In my view, the
computed score should interpret "no date" as "date = infinity" instead
of "date = today". I really would like to see this changed or made
configurable so that automatic sorting becomes more usable.
Am 30.12.2017 um 22:31 schrieb Wallace Gilbraith:
> If a task doesn’t have a Due Date - it’s not time-critical, and is
> therefore a Someday task
Additionally, you can set "goal" to week, month or year, if you don't
have a fixed due date but still wont to indicate that you want to get it
done in the specified time frame. So for me, everything that has no
start/due date and no goal is automatically a "someday/maybe" task.
Using the review date it's possible to re-examine such tasks, whether
they should be deleted, keep being "someday/maybe", or should be
realized by setting a date or goal.
> I still don’t use automatic sorting - figuring out how it works is a
> Someday task
The automatic sorting ("computed score priority") is one of the few
things that really need to be improved/changed in MLO because. The
problem is that it equates tasks without date (i.e. my "someday/maybe")
with tasks that are due today (my most important tasks). In my view, the
computed score should interpret "no date" as "date = infinity" instead
of "date = today". I really would like to see this changed or made
configurable so that automatic sorting becomes more usable.
-- Christoph
HelloI am new to GTD and to MLO. I have been using a web-only app called GTDNext. But I am frustrated that there is no mobile app version. I am looking for a tool to automate GTD lists (David Allen)I am looking for a tool with the following features:1. Extremely easy/fast data entry (using lots of hotkeys and only minimal use of the mouse)2. Multi-levels of Projects and Actions (i.e. sub-projects and/or sub-action )3. Ease of changing an item between Projects and Actions (and back).4. Next Actions - i.e. the ability to generate a queue of future Next Actions for a Project, but with the ability to just show one Next Action per Project. And as soon as you tick off an action as being complete, then the next action in the queue immediately pops up as the official "Next Action" for the Project.
5. The ability to send emails into the "In Basket" for processing (ideally with tags embedded in the title).6. Ability to put Projects (and Actions) into some sort of priority that is can be sorted/reported on and which is clearly visible with colour.i.e. I want to be able to see a screenful of items and without actually needing to read anything, to see which are the most urgent (about 4 levels of priority/color would be fine).7. "Focus" mark-up.
i.e. Separate from "priority" to have some bright colour mechanism for showing "has focus" (i.e. I have decided to do this item today)8. The ability do move projects up and down the list of projects FAST using hotkeys. i.e. To change the sort order of both Projects and Actions within projects very easily
9. Either a good web or PC application...10. ...that syncs well with a mobile app... that works off-line (as well as on-line).
11. Excellent security/encryption of all my project data12. A development team that has a history if being responsive to user requests.
In your opinion, how well does MLO match up?Many thanksJ
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I don't think I agree about the comment on gtd, Gary. For its core lists, David Allen just proposes a list of tasks for each context and a project list - You can do this with a few sheets of paper, so you can definitely make your MLO lists match this "strict GTD" system. However, MLO adds a load of other (optional) task parameters, so you can use other systems (I use a combination of Stephen Covery's "7 Habits" and the GTD, to make a system that works for me). You can use as many or as few of the MLO parameters as you need.However, there is next to no scripting or inheritance for new or modified tasks, so each parameter has to be entered or changed manually. Each parameter you have to maintain means that you take longer managing your system, rather than getting on with your tasks, so I'd recommend keeping it as simple and using as few of the different parameters as you can.Other than the flexibility of the task parameters, the great strength of MLO is its search and filtering functions, which mean that you can set up very many detailed, customised views of your task list, to help focus in on just what you need to see at any particular time. I haven't seen more flexible task management software, anywhere else, for this.Regarding John's list of requests. Here are my thoughts on the current state of development (from the point of view of the desktop application, though the mobile ones are similar):1. Extremely easy/fast data entry - PARTIALLY. There are quiet a lot of shortcut keys and customisable hotkeys. However, data entry is slowed down by the need to manually edit all of the parameters, rather than being able to set up any kind of inheritance.2. Multi-levels of Projects and Actions - YES. The outline tree can be nested to almost infinite depth.3. Ease of changing an item between Projects and Actions - YES. Hotkeys for toggling "project" and "folder" statuses, among other parameters.4. Next Actions - YES, I think - I haven't used "complete actions in order" or dependencies much, but they're available. You can also set up custom filters to narrow down to the important next steps in each project.
5. The ability to send emails into the "In Basket" for processing (ideally with tags embedded in the title) - ?DON'T KNOW.6. Ability to put Projects (and Actions) into some sort of priority that is can be sorted/reported on and which is clearly visible with colour.- YES. Importance, Urgency, star, due dates, etc, combined with customer filters, sorting and custom Automatic Formatting rules.7. "Focus" mark-up. - YES - I review my filtered and sorted task list and use the Star to tag items I want to focus on, for the day. Alternatives are flags or just relying on Importance, Urgency and Due Date to give an automatic Computed Score and sort the tasks into order.8. The ability do move projects up and down the list of projects FAST using hotkeys - YES. I have the hotkeys set up as Ctrl+Alt+arrow keys. I have hotkey Ctrl+Alt+M set up for the more free-form Move function - In the pop-up Move window, you can select different views, so quickly change to a list of projects or folders (or any other view you like) to help find where to move your task. The F3 window is also very useful if you want to drag and drop a lot of tasks to different locations in your outline.
9. Either a good web or PC application... - YES, the PC-application is pretty good. NO for the web application.10. ...that syncs well with a mobile app... that works off-line (as well as on-line) - YES (mostly). I use PC and iPhone app. However, WiFi sync has always been a bit of a pain to set up and maintain, unless you have a static IP address for your PC and a single WiFi network that you always use. WiFi sync no longer works for me, so I'm soon going to have to start a (cheap) server-sync subscription. Either way, the sync conflict resolution function and automated file backups are pretty thorough, though.
11. Excellent security/encryption of all my project data - PARTIAL. There are other discussion threads on the lack of transport security and the reliance on Amazon web server security for the server-side file. WiFi sync could be more secure, if your WiFi networks are kept private and secure and all the PCs and mobile devices are looked after.12. A development team that has a history if being responsive to user requests - PARTIAL. Since Alyona was hired, she's worked to respond to questions and problems pretty quickly. Whenever I've had a significant problem, an email to support (or a post to the community) has got a pretty quick response. However, there are complaints that we don't get to see any development plans or timescales (probably because the team don't want to make any promises that they then can't achieve) and that many feature requests don't get a reply. I think we just have to be patient and accept that's how a lot of software companies work. MLO is much more communicative than Microsoft, for example!I hope that some people find this helpful.Stéphane
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