Don't belong. Dangerous, like you. Can't be controlled. Can't be trusted. Everyone could just go on without me and not have to worry. People could be what they wanted to be. Could be with the people they wanted. Live simple. No secrets.

River ,'Objects In Space'


Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."

Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!


§ ita § - Jul 19, 2013 11:29:23 pm PDT #22769 of 25497
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Can anyone recommend a task list application for Android that was designed with GTD in mind? I see a couple, but they all look fairly young.

Speaking of fairly young, I'm barely anywhere in the book. Would a GTD-aware tool even be important?

Do any of Android's apps show Google Tasks through to Android? I'm also looking at a couple pass thrus of that. Which was spiked by seeing a calendar widget which looked better than my current one and could mix our corporate email application (Touchdown) with a number of other email and task sources. I need this since work stopped allowing use of the native Android Exchange client facilities. Not secure enough, they said.

All the iPads and iPhones store encrypted automatically, and if you lose or have yours stolen they will wipe THE WHOLE THING. They also do this when you're fired/leave the company. Standard IT process is to uninstall that email connection before you give notice.

While Touchdown is supposed to be giving the same level of encryption, the full device wipe will not be needed. But it's still in "beta" which seems to be code for "only a few lucky bastards in IT". When I brought my third device to get set up they told me to get a life.

One of the guys in Marketing was dangling his Surface, and mentioned a best-of-both-worlds scenario. Apparently IT/corporate can have a partition of your drive, and they can remotely nuke that as they see fit, but your stuff is yours. And apparently they can also be more granular about what still works when you connect in via VPN.

Inneresting.

No, really, it is. Read it again and see. Task list application help! GTD or Google Tasks! (I've been synching to it from Astrid, so there's that...)


Liese S. - Jul 20, 2013 3:53:12 am PDT #22770 of 25497
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Shoot, I really do need to find an Astrid replacement, don't I?


§ ita § - Jul 20, 2013 6:17:42 am PDT #22771 of 25497
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

It was HORRIBLE, Liese. Everything has annoyed me so far. I didn't know repeating tasks were suck a fancy idea.


-t - Jul 20, 2013 6:31:22 am PDT #22772 of 25497
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

That is driving me crazy about Google Tasks! I have to reset the due date instead of checking anything off, as far as I can tell. So stupid.


§ ita § - Jul 20, 2013 6:41:02 am PDT #22773 of 25497
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

If one of the Google task-interfacing tools put that in their app logic instead, it'd be great. But I'm a heavy user of "repeat x days from due date" and "repeat x days from date completed". The minute I'm back in control of scheduling those is where it starts to fall apart.

Lifehacker research seemed to indicate that The Milk App had fairly straightforward functionality in the paid version only, so I wasn't going there, but fuck, if there's a paid version of any task manager, I WANT RECURRING TASKS.

I peeked at some GTD apps, and I think I don't know enough about the methodology to dive in now. Not up for all that change at once.

One app, lord, it automatically added my 12 google accounts to it, and the settings screen for unselecting them forced you to do it one at a time--kicked you back to the front page every time. Meanwhile, I'm getting that system message asking if I want to give the app access to the 10 google accounts I don't want to, and that's coming so fast I can't get back into setting. I ended up turning off Wi Fi to give myself a fighting chance, but...not great first impression, guys.

Never mind that Astrid did such a crap job of synching with Google Tasks that maybe I should start again anyway. But I would like to push the tasks there anyway, even if the fancy logic is in the app.

Synch was always my weak point with Astrid, but I gave up on 6 or 7 apps last night already. So lucky/Buffista informed to have started off on the right foot, even if Yahoo is fucking us over now.


-t - Jul 20, 2013 6:48:22 am PDT #22774 of 25497
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

If one of the Google task-interfacing tools put that in their app logic instead, it'd be great.

That possibility had not occurred to me. I'm gonna have to start looking at iOS apps for that functionality, I think.

Eta: two possibilities that I will evaluate over the next few days, awesome.


le nubian - Jul 20, 2013 8:28:54 am PDT #22775 of 25497
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

So my to do setup is not using one app. No one app can do it for me. Omnifocus (Not sure if it is on Android) was built with GTD in mind, but the interface I have found to be not the way my mind works.

I use google calendar (and I have a specific calendar for this) for reminders for recurring bills. I need recurring bills to be in a separate area from work and other to dos or I get confused.

Recently, I have been using evernote notes as to dos. They provide alarms for each note that pop up on my phone, so that has been working really well. And I can have separate to do lists for projects and areas of my life.

I use iphone Reminders or Google Tasks for shopping and errands because it is easier to check things off. I might go back to Any.Do for daily tasks, errands, and shopping, but Any.Do got a little cluttered for me so I had to abandon it.


Rob - Jul 20, 2013 8:35:59 am PDT #22776 of 25497

I use Remember the Milk for GTD. I have lists for each of my action contents named with @, like @home or @computer. I have a list for Projects where I use P: as a prefex. I have a goals list, a someday/maybe list and a few other random lists like shopping and a general purpose checklist.

I used to use tags to link the tasks to the projects but now I don't bother. Regular review of the action and project lists helps me find the projects that don't have a next action.

[link] is a more complicated way of setting up GTD in RtM.


-t - Jul 20, 2013 8:37:14 am PDT #22777 of 25497
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

After a quick look at the two apps I found, the "recurring tasks" functionality is really just repeating every day/week/etc. which is not really what I want, but still more than Google Tasks so I might try them for a bit anyhow.

For me, this is just for work stuff. I have Omnifocus for daily life and that's working fine for me, and shopping is just a whole other ball of wax. My work e-mail and calendar is already Google-based, so if i can make Google Tasks work for me that would be best. Perhaps after this week's orientation I will be better equipped to figure out how to do that...


Gris - Jul 21, 2013 12:21:40 pm PDT #22778 of 25497
Hey. New board.

I use to do list very lightly and Google Task Manager is good enough for me. But it wont likely serve for y'all.

I bought a Nook HD+ yesterday after my original kindle fire gave up the ghost on a drive - we need it for last ditch Elmo distracting on the return drive.

It is a pretty darn good tablet. I would say it compares favorably with the original iPad in size and power,and what it lacks in camera it makes up for in removable storage. The default home screen is a little bit reading focused for those like me that do not plan to use it for that, but it isn't nearly as bad in that way as the Kindle Fire interface - it isn't that different from the standard Android launcher, in that you can use widgets and stuff by default. I did decide to install Nova launcher just to fit more icons on the screen, but it would have been fine with the normal home. And the inclusion of Google play means I had the option of replacing the launcher and keyboard easily!

So basically I paid $160 for a 9 inch android tablet that is pretty speedy, runs Android 4.0, has quite a nice screen, and has upgradeable storage so I can put lots of movies on it. I am fully satisfied.