8/17/2023 0 Comments Producteev gtd![]() ![]() If I manage to switch onto org-mode, and off OmniFocus, I will post here some more details (config files, how to implement GTD with it, etc.).I'm with Andy on this, as I remarked on the 40tech page. ![]() Still, finally learning some advanced emacs is actually quite interesting (I have started looking into elisp as well, of course). This is not particularly easy for me, given that I am a hardcore vim user. I will stick with it for at least a month, and see if I manage to have it work my own way. So, I have decided to give org-mode a try. Org-mode has the added benefit of having a good mobile application, which is working great on iPhone and iPad: MobileOrg. There is also an Android version, which I have not tried, not having an Android device. Org-mode is also great, probably the most flexible of them all (including OmniFocus this time), and based on plain text files. Taskwarrior seems already good enough, I really enjoy the ability to modify tasks using regular expressions, and all the tools around it (web interfaces, email to task, etc.). Only in the past couple of weeks I started to look at more geeky tools, and I came across two great options: Taskwarrior, and emacs' org-mode. Flexible support of recurring tasks (look at what OmniFocus can do in this area and you will see what I mean).The lack of a good implementation for start and due dates.Coming from OmniFocus, all seemed too simplistic and limited, the main problems being: These are just the names that come to mind, but I have gone through many others (including Things on the Mac, Toodledo, Wunderlist, and others). Asana: nice support of the keyboard (although the behavior is not consistent between Mac and Windows), but I will never get around the interface, and it also misses important features.Producteev: again, missing important features.Remember the Milk: nice and simple, but a little too simple for my needs.Nirvana: missing important features, no desktop apps, no attachments.Nozbe: missing important features, very poor support of keyboard shortcuts, desktop apps limited.I have tried pretty much all web apps out there, and then some: Being stuck with Windows at work, I was using OmniFocus less and less, and I was finding it difficult to track my work effectively. No comparable tools out thereįinally, I took the decision to look for a replacement for OmniFocus, to be able to jump back on the GTD wagon entirely: one of the principles of the methodology is to have a single trusted system for everything (personal, work, etc.). I was planning to write my own web app, but emulating OmniFocus' UX using today's web technologies is no easy task. There is no other desktop version: no Linux, no Windows, no web app (beside spootnik, which is particularly bad). There is only one problem: if you can't use a Mac, you are out of luck. I loved it from the start: flexible, it does not get in your way, has all the features you could dream of, and has great and stunning UI and UX. I have been using OmniFocus since the very first version on the Mac, and I have started using it on the iPhone and iPad as soon as it came out. kGTD): kGTD was based on OmniOutliner, and is OmniFocus' predecessor. After some time I managed to use my Mac at work, and I discovered Kinkless GTD (a.k.a. Needless to mention, Outlook is as bad as a productivity tool as it is as an email application. At the time I was stuck with Windows at work (as I am today unfortunately), so I tried to implement the methodology using Outlook. I have been sticking to the GTD methodology for quite some time I read David Allen's book in 2006, and have been sold to the methodology almost immediately. ![]()
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