Incluir en mis sitios favoritos
Ingresar Salir Inscribirme
Buscar Ayuda Contactar Ingresar Directorio Ultimos
Búsqueda avanzada
Preguntas frecuentes
BUSCAR EN: BLOGS FOTOS
 

Hola, Invitado
Ingresar  Inscribirme
En línea: 96 visitantes

Alemania (2)
Argentina (52)
Belice (2)
Bolivia (11)
Brasil (7)
Canadá (1)
Chile (18)
Colombia (18)
Costa Rica (26)
Cuba (20)
Dominicana, República (17)
Ecuador (5)
El Salvador (18)
España (178)
Estados Unidos (12)
Francia (2)
Guatemala (12)
Honduras (3)
Israel (0)
Italia (2)
Jamaica (0)
México (45)
Nicaragua (3)
Países Bajos (0)
Panamá (14)
Paraguay (6)
Perú (21)
Puerto Rico (6)
Reino Unido (1)
Uruguay (9)
Venezuela (38)





Búsquedas recientes

Lo más popular

Lo más buscado este mes

Archivo Weblogs


DIRECTORIO WEBLOGS :: Estados Unidos > Salud Incluir BlogEstados Unidos >  Salud Weblogs de Yaaqui.com DIRECTORIO WEBLOGS
Life Hack
creado con http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1  en Blogueros
ENVIAR A UN AMIGO
Para subscribirse a  requiere identificarte
Usuario: Ingresar

Personal Development Weblog,
Daily digest on productivity and life improvementsVisitarStepcase Lifehack
Dirección URLhttp://www.lifehack.org    Registrado:03-Jul-2007
Compartir:

Compartir en Facebook Compartir en Twitter Stumble It More...


Enviar a email
Visitar Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software en FeaturedTechnologyreviewsoftwaretask management
Por Joel Falconer
el 04-Mar-2009

things

I’ve followed the development of Cultured Code’s Things with keen interest since it was announced in its early stages. It seemed like it was going to come closer to providing a truly seamless and ubiquitous, but most importantly, smooth application for managing the things that need to get done each day.

My problem with task management applications is this: they require too much conscious effort on my part. Task management apps should flow, should make using them easier than jotting things down on a napkin. Many are perfectly functional but don’t put the effort into creating that flow. Things is the first OS X task management application I tried where I felt like I didn’t really have to try, despite it some similar features to other offerings.

It received its fair share of praise and criticism while in beta, and I referenced both Things for Mac and Things Touch (the iPhone and iPod touch version) in articles here and elsewhere, but I always find it best - in terms of good etiquette, at least - to allow a product to exit beta before judging it.

For those of you who want to save time, my verdict is this: it’s still the smoothest experience, and I still don’t feel like I have to try. For those who want the grand tour, follow along with me.

The Inbox

The first thing you’ll see when you open Things is the Inbox. Falling in line with good GTD methodology, you capture everything in your inbox as you go, and you process it later at an appropriate time. For me, this is the cornerstone of the system, and any good custom productivity system, because it allows you to keep track of everything that needs doing without allowing it to steal mental processing power and attention at that time.

1inbox

The Inbox is built so that you can rapidly enter tasks in succession as they come to mind, which is great for a mind-dumping session. You can just enter the tasks as they are, or you can include notes and a deadline. Usually for a mind-dump, the description of the task is sufficient, but the extra features come in handy.

Of course, rapid mind-dumping is important and Things caters to this, but perhaps even more important is ubiquitous capture. If all you want is ubiquitous capture on your one computer running Things, you’ve got it with the help of the Quick Entry feature. Tap a keystroke on your keyboard, and this window will appear:

1bquickentry

After you’ve captured tasks either on the fly with Quick Entry or in a mind-dumping session, getting those tasks sorted is an easy and smooth process. Once you’ve done some initial set-up work with Things, it’s a matter of drag-and-drop, and the occasional need to begin a new project or area of responsibility.

Things offers ubiquitous capture beyond the computer, but it comes at a price. That price is the need to own an iPhone or iPod touch. You can then purchase and install Things Touch which is an excellent companion with sync capability, but is the subject of another review, another day.

Today

One of my favorite parts of Things is the Today screen. This section allows you to see tasks you have either manually designated or automatically (and perhaps recurringly) scheduled to fall on the current day. Basically, it lets you narrow down and focus exclusively on the tasks you wanted to get done today, and it reminds you of any deadlines that might’ve slipped past your memory.

2today

I often have hundreds or thousands of tasks floating around in my task management software. Don’t worry, I haven’t been writing one thing here and doing another for the past year, because many of these are someday/maybe tasks I’d like to get around to in the future, when I have the time and inclination. But still, having dozens of projects and plenty of someday ideas can be a little distracting when you need to hunker down and work. I don’t need to or want to see them on a day-to-day basis; I need to see what I assigned for today on my last weekly review, hunker down, and get off the computer in time for dinner.

And this is something I miss in too many programs: there’s not enough to focus you. There’s plenty to capture, sort, record, archive, and do all sorts of librarianesque stuff. But focus is perhaps the most important, and most frequently missing, key to having an effective and efficient day.

Next

The Next screen is another pane of focus, but of a different sort. Today is a focus restrained by chronological factors. Next is, as GTDers would expect, a list of the immediate next actions of each project or area of responsibility you’ve used Things to track. Today helps you focus on what you need to do to finish work and go home. Next helps you focus on what you need to do to move each of your projects forward, whether you want to finish them this week or this year.

3next

Scheduled & Projects

The Scheduled pane shows you a list of all tasks for which you’ve elected to assign a due date or a recurrence. The way the data is presented is refreshing; some programs sort the tasks by numerical dates (like 12/12/12). It’s important to see this data, but what’s better is to sort the tasks by a more human-readable name and provide the exact date next to the task description as Things has done.

So what you get here are tasks sorted by names like Daily, Every month, or just March, to give you an overview of when and how often things happen:

4scheduled1

I would suggest that Cultured Code implement a calendar view so you can see what’s coming up in a more tangible way.

Projects is a succinct, well-presented listing of all your active projects, as well as your someday and scheduled projects which can be hidden from view until the time comes. I haven’t got a lot of them going on in this reviewing deployment of Things - there are a heap in my day-to-day deployment and I’ve just taken that and stripped it of sensitive projects for screenshots, and that happened to be most of them!

5projects

Things will give you the name and rough due date of the project, along with the number of tasks inside and a satisfying checkbox for when you’ve completed the whole thing.

The pane for active projects themselves gives you all the information you’ve recorded regarding the project as a whole at the top ? description, due date, notes, tags, and so on ? followed by a listing of all the tasks that comprise the project, with similar data available. You need to double-click tasks to see info other than the description (which I think is a good thing), but the project overview information is persistent:

6activeproject

Area of Responsibility provides a place to assign those tasks that don’t fall under a time-constrainted, results-oriented project, and are either one-offs or recurring tasks for a role you occupy. This pane works a lot like the Inbox, a clean listing of the tasks, and nothing but the tasks.

Someday

Every good system needs a place for you to dump the ideas you’ve ubiquitously captured but can’t or don’t want to work on yet. Someday items and projects stay out of the road until you’re ready to review them or drag them onto the production line. If a piece of task management software doesn’t have a Someday section, I won’t use it, so I’m glad to see this.

someday

What I’d Like to See

While Things is a great piece of software and is now my preferred day-to-day digital task management system, there’s one place where I think it falls down the most: synchronization. The ability to sync between my phone and one Mac is a great start, but I have more than one Mac and I spend equal amounts of time working on each.

So while Things works great when I’m out and about and need to remember something, or I’m plugging away at my iMac, I’m left out in the cold while I’m on my Macbook Pro. So far I’ve made this work by using Things Touch, but trust me when I say this approach gets mighty tiresome. I’m longing for Things to synchronize between my iPhone and multiple Macs.

Perhaps the best way to facilitate this would be by syncing through a service like Remember the Milk; it saves Cultured Code from having to develop an entire online infrastructure to facilitate said synchronization over the Internet, and it allows you to access your tasks wherever there’s an Internet connection if you don’t have an iPhone or you lose it.

Go take a look at Things for Mac ? I highly recommend it!


Offering a unique perspective and insight on productivity based on his experience as a writer, musician, family man and manager, Joel Falconer has been published online and off, and brings to Lifehack's readers practical advice you can use to be more efficient and effective.



Leído 15 veces

Para Subscribirse a  requiere identificarse antes
Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software en  Weblogs de Yaaqui.com  Blogueros Personal Development

Fotologs
The Lifehack Letter: A New Addition to the Stepcase Lifehack Family

Foto 0 en  - The Lifehack Letter: A New Addition to the Stepcase Lifehack Family
Más fotos The Lifehack Letter: A New Addition to the Stepcase Lifehack Family + fotos




11-Feb-2012
A Simple Valentine?s Day Guide for Singles

Foto 0 en  - A Simple Valentine?s Day Guide for Singles
Más fotos A Simple Valentine?s Day Guide for Singles + fotos




10-Feb-2012
Setup Restricted User Accounts to Focus and Get Things Done

Foto 0 en  - Setup Restricted User Accounts to Focus and Get Things Done
Más fotos Setup Restricted User Accounts to Focus and Get Things Done + fotos




10-Feb-2012

Life Hack Blogueros

Personal Development Weblog, Stepcase Lifehack Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks

Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software
things - Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software I’ve followed the development of Cultured Code’s Things with keen interest since it was announced in its early stages. It seemed like it was going to come closer to providing a truly seamless and ubiquitous, b [..] Leer nota completa
Subscribirse a Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software
Publicado 04-Mar-2009 por Joel Falconer en FeaturedTechnologyreviewsoftwaretask management
Leído 15 veces. Más resultados en Más artículos Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software Fotos acerca Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software en Yaaqui
Life Hack Blogueros

Personal Development Weblog, Stepcase Lifehack Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks

3 Secrets to Moving Personal Task Management to the Business Level
731545_43123449 - 3 Secrets to Moving Personal Task Management to the Business Level You’ve got managing your tasks down to a science. Your dry cleaning is always picked up on time, your ‘honey-do’ list at home has nothing left on it, and you’ve even gotten thr [..] Leer nota completa
Subscribirse a Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software
Publicado 17-Feb-2009 por Thursday Bram en FeaturedManagementtasktodo-list
Leído 10 veces. Más resultados en Más artículos 3 Secrets to Moving Personal Task Management to the Business Level Fotos acerca 3 Secrets to Moving Personal Task Management to the Business Level 3 Secrets to Moving Personal Task Management to the Business Level en Yaaqui
El Canasto Lleida

El Canasto

Task Coach
Task Coach - Task Coach Task Coach es un gestor de tareas sencillo con la posibilidad de dividir tareas en tareas más pequeñas y registrar el tiempo trabajado en cada tarea. [..] Leer nota completa
Subscribirse a Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software
Publicado 09-Apr-2010 por El Canas en General
Leído 8 veces. Más resultados en Más artículos Task Coach Fotos acerca Task Coach Task Coach en Yaaqui
Life Hack Blogueros

Personal Development Weblog, Stepcase Lifehack Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks

Back to Basics: Your Task List
Todo List - Back to Basics: Your Task List [..] Leer nota completa
Subscribirse a Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software
Publicado 18-Jul-2008 por Stepcase en artistas
Leído 17 veces. Más resultados en Más artículos Back to Basics: Your Task List Fotos acerca Back to Basics: Your Task List Back to Basics: Your Task List en Yaaqui
Life Hack Blogueros

Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks

Keep Work Flow By Stopping Mid-Task
Of all the thousands of ‘tips for success’ posts and ‘things you must learn’ articles it can be difficult to distinguish the great from the mediocre. Sometimes they’re too specific and others much too general. [..] Leer nota completa
Subscribirse a Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software
Publicado 28-Jun-2007 por Craig Childs en free tools webdesign fonts
Leído 30 veces. Más resultados en Más artículos Keep Work Flow By Stopping Mid-Task Fotos acerca Keep Work Flow By Stopping Mid-Task Keep Work Flow By Stopping Mid-Task en Yaaqui
Life Hack Blogueros

Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks

Productivity Tip: How Not to Overspend Your Time On a Task
Overspending Time - Productivity Tip: How Not to Overspend Your Time On a Task Have you ever felt that you spend way too much time on something? You started reading a book, but eventually realized that the time you spend on it far exceeds the value you get. Or maybe you worked on a project, but after completing it you realize [..] Leer nota completa
Subscribirse a Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software
Publicado 02-Oct-2007 por Donald Latumahina en AudioEntrevistaMarta Colomina
Leído 55 veces. Más resultados en Más artículos Productivity Tip: How Not to Overspend Your Time On a Task Fotos acerca Productivity Tip: How Not to Overspend Your Time On a Task Productivity Tip: How Not to Overspend Your Time On a Task en Yaaqui
Life Hack Blogueros

Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks

4 Tasks That Don?t Belong In Your Task List
Do you have a growing task list of things that never get done? You’ll need to learn to recognize 4 simple items that you shouldn’t bother adding to your lists. The One-Minute Task. [..] Leer nota completa
Subscribirse a Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software
Publicado 04-Oct-2007 por Craig Childs en CuriosidadesInternetPortadaCampañas publicitariaspublicidadesvideos youtube
Leído 37 veces. Más resultados en Más artículos 4 Tasks That Don?t Belong In Your Task List Fotos acerca 4 Tasks That Don?t Belong In Your Task List 4 Tasks That Don?t Belong In Your Task List en Yaaqui
Life Hack Blogueros

Personal Development Weblog, Stepcase Lifehack Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks

How to Get More From Your Task List with Layout Hacks
[..] Leer nota completa
Subscribirse a Things for Mac: Intuitive & Streamlined Task Management Software
Publicado 22-Sep-2008 por Stepcase en artistas
Leído 16 veces. Más resultados en Más artículos How to Get More From Your Task List with Layout Hacks Fotos acerca How to Get More From Your Task List with Layout Hacks How to Get More From Your Task List with Layout Hacks en Yaaqui

Advertencia YAAQUI.COM no verifica la veracidad de la información publicada y no se responsabiliza por el uso que se le de a la infomación del contenido publicado en los feeds y weblogs independientes. Las opiniones vertidas en este sitio no necesariamente son nuestras. Nos reservamos el derecho de remover cualqueir material que consideremos inconveniente.



Colección de fotos de Orlando Bloom

Orlando Bloom
Violines stradivarius en el Museo de NY Nueva York

Colección Violín Stradivarius
Imagen de una calle del Viejo San Juan, Puerto Rico

Calle en el Viejo San Juan Puerto Rico
Clasificados Costa Rica Clasificados Argentina Clasificados de España Clasificados Puerto Rico Envía una Postal