Organizational Software
I’ve always been a big fan of using software for organizing my time efficiently. With as many projects as I have going on right now, it’s essential to be on top of things like milestones, meetings and due dates. To manage all of this, I primarily use four different applications:
- GMail – a web-based email service with an amazing interface
- Yahoo Calendar – a web-based scheduling, appointment and reminder system
- ToDoList – a PC-based program that lets you keep track of hierarchical lists of projects and tasks
- Phatsoft TMR – a PC-based program that lets you set reminders that pop up periodically to remind you of time-sensitive tasks
As well as this system works, there are several problems:
- Without net access, I can’t update my calendar
- Without net access, I can’t manage my email, or compose and queue up new emails
- Since ToDoList and Phatsoft TMR are two separate programs, there is no automatic way to set pop-up reminders for tasks listed in ToDoList
I’d really love to see a solution that was a PC-based desktop application synchronized with an Internet hosted application. The hosted application would have its own web interface that you could access anywhere. Meanwhile, the desktop application would cache and queue up modifications when it couldn’t connect to the server.
The closest thing that I’ve found to something like this is Microsoft Outlook coupled with Microsoft Exchange server. It is about 75% of the solution, except for three major drawbacks:
- It doesn’t support hierarchical projects and tasks, only a flat list
- It is very expensive (when you consider the cost of purchasing and running Exchange server)
- It is unreliable (uptime and data integrity issues plague Outlook and Exchange)
Perhaps someone out there knows of a better solution…
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March 22nd, 2006 at 10:40 pm
Well…there’s something you could do when you’ve finished your masters…
Have you tried http://www.tadalist.com/? The lists are flat, not hierarchical, but its web-based which I find very handy when I want to make my grocery list while at work, but access it when I get home..
March 31st, 2006 at 12:12 am
Consider Opentext’s “Livelink” - haha! It is by defination the everything software. Does all these things you mention + msm + org software + a yahoo type search engine + files storage + about a million more things. That it happens to be Enterprise Content Managament software, is kinda meant for 100-100k users, and isn’t something you can pickup at best buy or your friend’s burned cd library, might of course be another matter… Chalk one up however for ‘go big or go home’!?