4/10/2023 0 Comments Pagico calendar![]() ![]() All UI operations complete instantly, so your Pagico experience is smoother than ever. >practices what he preaches and offers productivity courses as well >plenty of tutorials to get you through the required steps.Pagico 10 employs a completely rewritten frontend data engine, making everyday interactions substantially faster than version 9. >structured individual tasks any outliner can do this >tool) essentially needs to have the following: >As a broader reference, I would say that a PPM (Personal Project Management >You may be lucky and save a good deal if the discount appears within your trial >enter your email at its Bits du Jour page >you won’t need these to work with the Planner. >syncing with Outlook or Google Calendar) >information for each task and show this on a timeline and/or calendar (possibly via >too (and much more, but the learning curve is significant) as well as other tools setting completion either as Done/Pending or percentage (I personally >- Support for follow-up of the individual >comment that the project’s information management is something different and >mentioned here in the past, like Watership Planner. >found Leo Babauta’s books and blog helpful in that >acquires more tools, it is good to find ways to simplify the actual workflow I have >better suited for PIMs like UltraRecall or MyInfo. A mind map function for doing a work breakdown structure (WBS) to determine main project tasks (sub-projects) visually I thought about it a bit more and came up with the following as my ideal project management setup: Thanks Alexander, a good list of functions. A hierarchical outliner for creating and organising tasks with unlimited sub-tasks with start/due dates, duration etc. with ability to zoom in (hoist), and calculate project duration Ĥ. Multi-week view (same as above but with lots of additional weeks in rows below, up to 15 or more) ĥ. Gantt chart for viewing the entire project. ![]() ![]() I have started downloading them and testing them. >Can you tell me what’s missing from Pagico in that >extensively and I’ve found several half-there I have also looked again at Natara Bonsai and MyLifeOrganized, as they have a lot of PM features that I haven’t fully checked out in the past. >regard? I’m quite interested as it is cross-platform. To be fair to the software, my experience was mainly with version 4, and I see that it’s now up to version 5.3 (and the website has also been upgraded, which was necessary). I liked its timeline presentation, but for some functions the interface was too busy. Some actions were over-complicated or impossible: for example, as far as I can remember, contacts couldn’t be directly imported from the Apple Address Book (whereas, for example, in Merlin they can). I seem to remember that setting up a project itself was unduly complicated I imagine that has been improved. Most fundamentally, the application didn’t have quite enough project management features for me it couldn’t tell me, for example, where the slack would be, or, other than by visual inspection, where “violations” might occur. Process 3, from Jumsoft, is another “half-there” very simple Mac project management application I also looked at. There’s clearly a perceived market for such tools, but on the Mac I haven’t seen anything as developed as Achieve Planner on the PC (or InfoCube or Watership Planner, neither of which I’ve used). Not that this is the answer you were looking for Dr Andus, but here’s an unorthodox suggestion for a project manager: Scrivener. I’ve put together a little PDF (using Clarify*) that shows how you might go about creating a project management project in Scrivener: I haven’t yet really tried this in practice, I’ve just considered it in principle. ![]() I think the corkboard, outline views and various ways of including meta-data make Scrivener pretty solid as a project management application. It won’t do calculations for you, as in helping you schedule tasks. And the Mac Version would be better than the Windows versions, since you can create a field for due dates in the Mac version, while you have to put due dates in the synopsis in the Windows version. That all makes Scrivener an acceptable application for managing a project. ![]()
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