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Kathleen Fitzpatrick 655ad0ded8 upgrade to 3.0
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OmniOutliner 2005-07-14T12:05:55-04:00 /omnioutliner/
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Ive been on the hunt for some time now for a more adequate tasks manager, something that would enable me to combine the benefits of the digital with the clarity of print-on-paper lists. None of the to-do type things Ive used have really been adequate, for whatever reason: the tasks aspect of something like iCal or Entourage or Palm Desktop is generally much too constrained; on the positive side, it can link particular tasks to particular days, but the notions of categorizing and prioritizing that these packages use dont really work for me. (For them to work, Id need something much more multi-dimensional, something that allows you to indicate both the urgency and the importance of any given task. And Id need a much more fluid set of categories to work with. iCal is the worst offender, in this regard; I still despise the whole “calendars” instead of “categories” model that the program uses, and to have to associate tasks only with particular calendars is just nuts.)

Ive poked at a number of other organizing-type software packages, such as StickyBrain and Backpack, but all have seemed more unwieldy than helpful. I wanted something clean but flexible, something that wouldnt demand high levels of input from me but would just shut up and do what I wanted.

(I attempted to try Burnout Menu as well, but the demo insisted, upon first being fired up, that I had been using it for 28 days, and that I had to buy a license to continue. The license is super cheap, but I was much too annoyed about the failed demo to fork over cash sight unseen. Top that off with the fact that an email to their support address has gone unanswered for two days, and Im just not biting.)

Anyhow, after GZombies post about Scotts recent use of OmniOutliner, I got a bit curious. My new Powerbook came with OO pre-installed, but Id never fired it up, being completely uncertain what Id use it for. I started it up, and heres the first thing I saw:

(image missing)

That little tickbox next to the open text field is, indeed, a tickbox. Meaning that perhaps this software could be good not just for outlining things that need to get written, but also for organizing all the to-do crap littering my head. And heres the genius part: because you can create nested lists, and because those nested lists are collapsible, you can set your list up such that you can only see the portion of your tasks that youre willing or able to work on at any given moment. For instance, Im at home right now, so I can open my list like this:

(image missing)

Ive only started tinkering with this, so Im not sure in the long run how Im going to like it, but at the moment, Im sold.