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Review: 'Kinkless GTD' for automated, elegant OS X task management
Merlin Mann | Oct 4 2005
I think Ethan J. A. Schoonover may have struck a wonderful balance of power, simplicity, automation, and low-key good looks with his “Kinkless GTD” System. By combining the stupendous OmniOutliner Pro with a bit of Applescript and pixie dust, KGTD provides a sensible way to manage Projects and Next Actions in one very clever little document. For those of you not already using and loving OO, this is a beautiful chance to see it in action. The heart of the app lies in dedicated views (top-level outline rows for OO fans) for your Projects and their daughter Actions. Project view shows all related Next Actions, and Action view shows those NAs by customizable context (@home, @shopping, etc.). Additional views for periodic Reviews, Trigger Lists, Someday-Maybe, etc., make this a true GTD implementation—not just a tarted-up To-do list. The sexy part comes from the freestanding OO doc’s ability to remember and update the associations for your tasks. For example, a totally paper or txt setup doesn’t natively hook all the pieces of your world together (and update everywhere when a task is completed). Kinkless GTD, with a click of the “Sync” button, puts everything in its place, and tidies up your GTD world in a curiously satisfying way. It even puts your completed items in an Archive (which is so handy if you need occasional motivation or if you freelance and get lazy about keeping time.) There’s more to this all—especially in today’s re-written .61 release—and I encourage you to have a look if you're an OS X geek in the market for a new GTD system. Yes OmniOutliner Pro is $69.95 (and worth every nickel, IMHO), but Ethan has released KGTD under the GNU GPL, which makes his implementation free as in…well…almost everything. Ethan has done a beautiful job with this over a very short period of time. KGTD is easy to install, elegant to use, and contains generous, often funny documentation right inside your document. Like most good tools, it’s designed to only do a couple things really well (so you wouldn’t dump in your calendar and tons of support materials at this point); this is really an app for seeing your Tasks in context and for removing the painful recursion of manually oiling all your productivity machine’s moving parts. With the automation and auto-organization in place in KGTD, I could see a lot of people really digging this. Great work, Ethan. 16 Comments
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I don't see the magic...Submitted by Oliver Nielsen (not verified) on October 18, 2005 - 3:27am.
I don't see the magic of this system, and while it is free, it is dependent upon Omni Outliner, which does indeed cost money. The thing about having to press "sync" all the time seems In that aspect I think Life Balance is way better, and the interface is, IMO, not any worse than most other apps. Life Balance is not to be "shoehorned" into doing this, as I when I read GTD by David Allen I kept thinking he must have gotten the whole idea from the Life Balance ideology. Also, I can't help feeling people are a little too obsessed with the whole GTD thing. I have David Allen's (audio)book Getting Things Done, but I keep thinking it's maybe more a way to think than a way to structure an application. It seems like people think that putting stuff into an application will make them more productive, but in the end it's all up to Nike's approach: Just Do It. » POSTED IN:
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