Leave a comment

Comments 5

reepicheep April 16 2009, 23:28:38 UTC
Hm... Interesting. Yeah, I designed my own "absolutely the best to-do list evar" a while ago and started building it in flex- air and then got distracted... but I remember being impressed with remember the milk, but then frustrated that it didn't do what I wanted...

I've settled on OmniFocus, an *almost* perfect to do list and project management piece of software for macs built by zealous subscribers to GettingThingsDone. I still want to build a better one though... but I want to build a better lots of things. I'm sure you know the feeling :)

Reply

meowse April 17 2009, 18:26:15 UTC
Oh, you speak Flex? We should talk.

Reply

reepicheep April 17 2009, 18:37:20 UTC
Oh, well, speak? no. ie, program? No I do not program in flex. Though a good friend who I got a job with my ex-boss in SF is one of the best flex programmers I've ever met (and has contributed to the core flex drag and drop code and fixed many a bug for adobe).

I just design, these days, and then beg and plead and cajole programmers to do the dirty work for me. I'm turning my thoughts on the todo list program into something a little more grand lately and may one day launch a legitimate software piece of my own... and hopefully get bought and get all rich and shit. you know the drill.

but I'd be thrilled to talk to you regardless about this or other things, because I miss the Meowse!
*big hugs!*

Reply


agrumer April 17 2009, 01:05:32 UTC
I've been using RememberTheMilk for two or three years now. It's got a Google widget or gadget or whatever the heck those things are called that show up in your iGoogle page, so I see my todo list whenever I open a new browser window.

Reply


bluejogger April 17 2009, 02:11:06 UTC
I've been using Yahoo Group's Reminders for public things like games. It can send an email before the event (say 1 day or 1 week) and that helps to keep it current.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up