

I haven’t found a way of marking an email as a task, or how to drag an email into Pagico. Oh, and I have to say, the macbook hardware is really good too!]) application I use. Worse, nowadays, management gubbins is most of my day job, which is why the blogging has dried up. But I have to confess, for management gubbins, I do like the Mac. We’ll see how the week goes, but I’m already a bit disappointed in that the evernote integration is weak - one only gets to drag a web-link in, so it doesn’t work with native (mac(/computing/2014/08/building_your_own_jasmin_virtual_machine/). Blimey again.Īt this point I have a lot of actions in a few projects. Sounds like he’ll fix some of the things I didn’t like/wanted.
PAGICO ANDROID TRIAL
Blimey, that’s responsive (and I made it clear I was only using the trial version and might not buy). On Sunday I had a reply, I replied, he replied. The lesson I take from that particular exercise is that the “organise” part of GTD is incredibly important, and probably independent of the tool (provided it has at least three levels of hierarchy).Įxperience with Pagico itself? Well, I had some little glitches I didn’t like, so on Saturday I wrote to the developer. I achieved inbox zero for the first time in, well, it seems like forever (certainly at least a year). I (manually) moved a bunch of emails into Pagico (and archived them in Gmail). However, meanwhile, in just trying to work out how to use Pagico, I did some really useful thinking about how to organise my workflow into task lists, tasks, projects and collections.

Of course, in doing so, I did a bit of googling… and started wondering whether Pagico was really what I want. So, as i said, I spent some hours with it. I liked the “dashboard” (pseudo-Gantt) … and when I read about it I liked the idea of Evernote and email integration. I particularly liked the someday tasks, that show up for tomorrow.

Well, Pagico on Eric’s screen certainly looked like it. I use it for everything of course, but for GTD, I just use a weekly to-do list with check boxes, but it doesn’t organise things … and I find I ignore the reminders … so is there something better out there? I’ve used a range of notes tools, and I’m currently using Evernote. Years ago I used Remember the Milk (successfully, for some months, but in the end it it couldn’t deal with the complexity of information I wanted to store in it). Why? Well, I’m continually feeling hassled by the number of things that I’m trying to keep track of, the size of my inbox etc, so a good GTD tool has always been something I’ve been looking for. I was sufficiently impressed that I spent a few hours on Saturday morning playing with it.

My colleague Eric Guilyardi showed me Pagico on Friday. In management next is «Pagico Experience at week one.») Next Post «Big Data and Extreme-Scale Computing (BDEC)» Searches can be used as a mid-step while creating Zaps.In management previous is «Managing Action Items») Searches are Actions in Zapier that find existing data and fill in gaps if needed. The most common actions are “Create” actions, which, as their name implies, make new items from the data you enter. There are two types of Actions - Searches and Creates.
