From the category archives:

GTD

GTD Online: New features for Vitalist

by Earl Moore on January 16, 2007


There appears to be a new version of Vitalist, which includes many new features such as: drag-n-drop list priorities, mobile edition, email & sms reminders, ical and xml feeds, ssl support, file attachments, recurring actions, and a new server which should speed things up.

Vitalist also implements the inbox, actions, projects, and ticklers to compliment the “Getting Things Done” system.

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GTD Online

by Earl Moore on December 29, 2006

For all you GTD fans, there’s an interesting post on Brilliantdays of the application Vitalist.

GTD online | brilliantdays.com:
There‚’s a race to be the best Mac GTD app. And the race is certainly on with the online versions too. I‚’ve looked at Tedium before, and Vitalist (or should I spell it ‚”Vital!st‚” - nah‚, that looks like spam‚) is similar to Tedium.

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GTD: Midnight Inbox Beta

by Earl Moore on August 29, 2006

Another GTD manager for Mac OS X. This application is due for official release in Septerber but is available as a beta now.


Midnight Inbox 1.0 Beta 1 is a list, note, file and to-do manager optimized for David Allen’s Getting Things Done techniques. It offers automatic collection of incoming items such as new email, documents and calendar events, provides guided and automatic processing of those items into projects and next actions, includes reminders of the two-minute rule, and facilitates the reviewing process. It also includes a set of features to coordinate and organize physical files. Midnight Inbox is available for Mac OS X 10.4.

MacInTouch: timely news and tips about the Apple Macintosh

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GTD: Application of Workflow

by Earl Moore on July 30, 2006


Overview:

Since my last post on this subject I’ve used my GTD target workflow to research and select software applications to execute the functions. My decision to do as much of this with computer tools as was possible was based upon two main ideas or facts:

1. About 75-85% of my tasks originate via email or another electronic form. These items naturally lend themselves to easily being processed and tracked via computer.

2. I wanted to establish an archive of completed projects, reference items, and other related data, that I could search and use in future projects. This “”data warehouse”" will take time to collect enough information to be of real value, but I feel it may eventually show some interesting trends or data relationships. In any case it’s a history of my activities.

My one restriction for applications was that they had to be available for Apple OS X. Let’s take a look at how I’ve applied my selected applications to my GTD workflow. The diagram below is my original GTD workflow with an overlay of the application’s applied functional area. For instance the “Inbox” is mainly handled in kGTD while the functions of “@Someday/Maybe” and “@File” are handled in DEVONthink Pro.

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Applications Used:

You’ll notice that no one application does it all. I’m using the following four main applications (I’m counting kGTD and OmniOutliner Pro as one application):

Apple Mail;
KinkLess GTD with OmniOutliner Pro;
Apple iCal; and
DEVONthink Pro.

In addition, I’m using QuickSilver and/or Mail ActOn to help automate the Applescript interfaces.

Let’s take a look at the main purpose of each of these applications in my GTD workflow:

Apple Mail: This is where my electronic communications are initially collected. If I receive something and I can do immediately I do it from within Mail and then export the completed email task into my DEVONthink Pro archive (@File). If it’s a project or has a future due date I send the item to Kinkless GTD (kGTD) where a task is created with all the email body as part of the task description. From that point I handle it in kGTD. If something is only a Reference Item or a Maybe Someday Item I send it to DEVONthink Pro to file.

kGTD and OmniOutliner Pro: This is the real heart of my GTD system. I do my multistep project planning in kGTD and it automatically manages next to-do items and date sensitive items. kGTD interfaces, via an included Applescript, with Apple’s iCal to display and track date sensitive items in a calendar format. I also enter my manual tasks directly into kGTD. I use a “”Send to kGTD”" Applescript and Quicksilver to enter tasks or project steps into kGTD without having to enter them directly via kGTD and OmniOutliner. For supporting paper documents or reference material I have a manual file folder system. However, for the future I’m considering how I could scan these items and attach them directly to the associated tasks. Two Applescripts, one that sends tasks to kGTD from Mail and the other that lets you quickly create manual tasks in kGTD using Quicksilver make the collecting and processing the data much easier. However, I’m still looking for ways to improve on this. See more on these scripts below.

Apple iCal: kGTD interfaces with Apple’s calendar application to record date sensitive tasks on you calendar and then track their completion status. The calendar is updated each time you sync kGTD.

DEVONthink Pro: I’m using this for Maybe Someday, Reference, and Archive Items. Each are stored in different groups in one DEVONthink database. All are searchable and DEVONthink does a good job of finding relationships between documents. You can sometimes see interesting trends or relationships using DEVONthink. I hope this database will become more then just storage. It’s a place I’ll probably go for research before taking action on future steps.

Quicksilver and Mail ActOn: I’m using these applications to automate Applescript interfaces to the other application. They make it possible to move data between these application with just a few keystrokes.

Interfaces Used:

You’ll see the following application interfaces on the diagram above:

[A]. Apple Mail to kGTD/OmniOutliner

  • Send Mail to KGTD Applescript using Quicksilver or Mail ActOn to initiate the script

[B]. Apple Mail to DEVONthink Pro

  • Print PDF to DEVONthink Pro

[C]. KGTD to DEVONthink PRO

  • Print PDF to DEVONthink Pro or Copy/Paste

[D]. KGTD to Apple iCal

  • kGTD Internal Applescript interface to iCal

There is also the function of manual task entry into kGTD using a Send to KGTD Advanced script called by Quicksilver.

First Impressions:

I’ve only had had all of this configured and working for about a week so I’m still learning how best to use this system. Over-all I would say I’m fairly pleased with it, but time will tell. The only initial downside is that it’s a little more complicated then I would of wished with four applications and as many interfaces. Quicksilver and the scripts make the process much easier.

Next Steps:

  • Continue to improve the work flow.
  • Look at a reasonable way to enter/scan the manual reference documents so that they are also searchable via DEVONthink.
  • Investigate how or if project manager software (i.e. iTaskX, Omniplan, etc.) could be used as the core application.

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GTD: MonkeyGTD

by Earl Moore on July 20, 2006


While researching GTD applications I ran across this self contained browser based system.

MonkeyGTD is a TiddlyWiki powered Getting Things Done (GTD) system which uses html, CSS, and Java Script, to run on any modern browser without the need for additional logic. MonkeyGTD features a dashboard, context action items, project tracking, reminders and more.

MonkeyGTD Screenshot:
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It has some nice features but I’m not sure it’s exactly what I was looking for. An interesting implementation.

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