Setting up meetings with people within and outside your own organization has always been a pain. Trying to find a common time usually involves a flurry of emails moving around the group and eventually finding that there is NO date and time where EVERYBODY can attend. That takes time.
Personally I don't believe there is a great solution for this problem since it almost requires everyone to be on the same system, on line at the same time and ready to respond. Right, like that's going to happen often.
Recently I found
and think this has potential. Jim Courtney's Skype Journal post gave a great explanation of the Outlook add-in product and its value. The great thing about this product is that it is agnostic to calendar systems though the organizer must currently be using Outlook.
The process is to share a set of open times, people select their preferences and finally once everyone enters their preferences, the "best" time is selected.
Try it, you'll like it.
Friday, May 23, 2008
Tungle and calendar coordination
Time, Task, Life Management Pt 2
As it works out there are really only a couple ways of looking at this and I believe David Allen (Getting Things Done) has pretty well summed up what you need to do.
- Collect
- Process
- Organize
- Review
- DO
I'll next look at some tools that can be used for doing all this stuff.
RememberTheMilk has a Getting Started site that gives a great overview of the features. I use this for maintaining a todo list for everything that is associated with my race registration business and personal activities. I use GMail as my personal email service. There is a great add-in for FireFox and GMail that adds RTM as a side window. This is an add-on from RTM and works well.
RTM has an INBOX to collect all your tasks. You can put items into the inbox using a number of methods. Entering a task into a form on the website is one way. The entry gives you options to enter due dates, repeating options, tags, location (more on this), url. It also shows you information on postponed, notes and sharing options.
One of the novel features is the geotagging of your tasks. Giving a task a location (even to tie it to a GoogleMap location) gives you yet another way to coordinate your work and plan your work.
Tagging of tasks allows you to tie a task to multiple projects or multiple categories. RTM gives you a way to build queries and set a query up as a tab within your RTM environment. Every time I see a new piece of software that is not currently allowing open beta, I enter a task to check on an invitation. I categorize the software into software and type. I set a task for two weeks out and check on my invite when that comes up if I don't ge the invite before that. I then set a task for testing the software and writing a blog entry. I have a query for software that shows all the open items I have out there. That query is a tab that I can open at any time to see what is open.
Any tab can be subscribed to as an RSS feed.
These tasks can be shared between people. Someone else can mail a task into your inbox and you can share a task with someone else who is a subscriber to RTM services. A team of workers could use these features very effectively.
Another very exciting set of options involve linking new services such as Twitter and Jott to RTM. I'll talk more about those services in another blog entry. Twitter is a microblogging platform. It allows you to send up to 140 characters to either everybody, to your known friends or direct to a private address. This last one is how you send a new item to RTM. Jott is very similar except that you do it with your phone by talking an entry. I use Jott extensively.
My next entry till be about Twitter and Jott and what they can do for you.
Saturday, May 3, 2008
Unbuntu 8.04 LTS
Last night I began the automatic process of upgrading my laptop from Feisty Fawn to Gutsy Gibbon. It was FLAWLESS. No problems what so ever.
In the process I am now running FF 3 beta 5. Still a bunch of addons that don't work but nothing that is critical. I'll report more later.
Friday, May 2, 2008
Focus, focus, focus
Ok, so I have lost a little focus. From this point on, this blog is going to be solely focused on technology and technology related issues. I'll keep all my personal ramblings over at my new personal blog site: http://daveploch.2wheeltech.com
That site will be simple and a place where I will wax eloquently on life, activities and stuff in general.
Dave
Thursday, May 1, 2008
A fine dinner with great friends at American Bounty

Dinner Thursday with our friends George and Maggie at American Bounty in Washington mo. It was great. Beef tenderloin with a basalmic reduction. Grilled salmon with a sweet rub. Apple cobbler for dessert. Sitting on the patio in sight of the river. Now this is living
