Empire Builder, thanks for the thoughts. A recurring weekly review task
+subtasks like yours helps a lot, but the granularity seems to be
limited to a single large step (e.g., "Review next actions"). Maybe I
could create another level of subtasks linked to various meta-contexts
or folders in my tree, but I think that will introduce a lot of extra
processing overhead, and I'm not sure if it would even be workable in
the Android version.
Since I'm just starting with GTD, I think I'm going to have a lot of
projects and actionable items, and over time I think a lot of those
will need to be refined, canceled, or moved to someday/maybe. I'm
expecting to have 1000+ actionable items soon, so the "review next
actions" step, for example, could potentially take me hours. (If I
just have to read 1000 tasks without editing them, it would take 50
minutes at a rate of one task every 3 seconds.)
I think I misspoke earlier--you're correct that the review feature
would ideally only show actionable, waiting-for, and someday/maybe,
not "all items." The specific use-case I had in mind for the review
feature was for the weekly review, rather than just for punting tasks
over and over again. Specifically, it would help with steps 6-10 in
your weekly review.
> 1. Gather loose papers
> 2. Process inbox
> 3. Review past calendar items
> 4. Review future calendar items
> 5. Empty your head
> 6. Review projects and goals
> 7. Review next actions
> 8. Review postponed/waiting for
> 9. Review checklists
> 10. Review someday/maybe
> 11. Pending / Files
If you want to strictly follow GTD, the review feature could be
simplified as follows:
1. Create a review "mode" (similar to "move mode" in the outline)
which is available in the "active by context" view
2. Checking off an item in "move mode" would set its "last checked-
off" date as today (instead of marking it as completed)
3. The review mode hides all items which were checked off fewer than 7
days ago.
Setting reminders on someday/maybe items is one possible workaround,
but reminders are intrusive and it's easier to have a dynamically-
generated list of tasks rather than having a separate reminder for
each task.
> The nice thing about having this multi-step checklist is that I don't have
> to refer back to the GTD book to make sure I'm not forgetting anything, and
> also it allows me to complete the review over the course of multiple
> sessions -- whenever I have a few minutes to spare. Which is, of course,
> the essence of GTD.
If you're willing to share, I would be interested to know how many
items you have in your system and how long it takes you to perform
each of the steps in a thorough weekly review. As I mentioned earlier,
I think I will have so many items in my system that some of the steps
themselves will have to be broken into multiple sessions. One of my
colleagues who uses OmniFocus has a list of 2700+ items but is able to
keep his review manageable by using a review process similar to the
one I described in my previous post. I have a couple hundred items in
my system right now, but between my e-mail inbox and a big box of
papers, I probably have several hundred more projects or tasks to add
to my inbox. Once I start breaking those down into actionable items by
processing the inbox, I think I'll quickly pass the 1000-item mark. It
would be nice to have a built-in feature which doesn't require you to
remember which list/view you were processing last, or where in that
list you left off.
If there is an MLO API, I can implement the Review feature as a
separate app--but so far I've gotten the impression that there is no
API for integration. Getting even a basic review feature added to MLO
would be immensely helpful and would probably be easier for the
developers than exposing the API. The important part is being able to
link back to the original task in MLO to edit it.
> 1. Gather loose papers
> 2. Process inbox
> 3. Review past calendar items
> 4. Review future calendar items
> 5. Empty your head
> 6. Review projects and goals
> 7. Review next actions
> 8. Review postponed/waiting for
> 9. Review checklists
> 10. Review someday/maybe
> 11. Pending / Files