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This Things Is What You Need To Make Mac Life Better.
Things is an exciting, fun, simple, elegant, easy to use personal management utility for the Mac. Things is so good you need to see it and use it, but you can’t buy it. Yet. Mac OS X Leopard will be the launching pad for a new generation of personal tools, utilities, and applications that make the complex and mundane actually simple and fun to use. Apple’s success with the iPhone should be a warning to every non-Mac software developer. Complex does not have to be difficult. Elegant is good because people actually use the features in good software. Thing is, or, rather, will be good software. Things is a personal To-Do utility that is at once elegant and simple, yet does those very complex things that keep most of us from using more complicated and capable software to keep ourselves organized. We’re big fans of iGTD, the Getting Things Done utility for the Mac. After all, one of the reasons we use our Macs is to get things done, right?
Mac users have dozens of personal organizers, to-do list managers, and project managers. Some of us have one of each, and seldom master all three. Why? The tools to help us are sometimes more complex than the problems they’re trying to solve. iGTD makes more effective use of context settings to get things done. The new TaskPaper is a good to-do list manager that makes it easy to manage and track what you need to do. Until Things comes along it’s a challenge to find a simple Mac utility that would combine all three functions. Getting things done, project management, to-do list manager. Yet that’s exactly what Things does well. Elegant task management. Things is intuitive. Create a simple task, a to-do list. Or, create a simple project which combines tasks. Or, create a GTD-like context to accomplish tasks, which help to complete projects. Track all the tasks and projects using Mac tools you already know how to use. The left column has a library which contains everything. There’s also a Focus area. Set a deadline via the built-in calendar with an alert. Drag and drop tasks into projects. Even assign tasks to other people and track their progress.
Things is smart enough to remember details so you don’t have to, and displays only the information needed, using multiple tags, dates, notes. Things left column Focus area could not be easier. Create to-do items, tasks, for Today, for the thing you work on Next, or Someday, or Postponed until later. Each task, or to-do item contains only the information you need. Name, tag, action, due date, and reminder alert. Each item on your list can be stand alone, making Things ultimately as easy as possible, but tasks can also be added to a project’s task list, or delegated to someone else. The left column in Things is also used to manage Projects and assignments if you want to step into a little more complexity without having your head explode while trying to figure out how to make it work. Create the task or to-do, then drag it to a Focus area, or to a Project, or both. The left column Area section performs the basic GTD context function. Again, Things simplifies and integrates the basic methodology of to-do lists, task and project management, and context efforts. We’ve been using Things for some time now in alpha-near-beta release. It’s worked flawlessly in Leopard. You can’t buy Things. Yet. But you may be able to try it out, which we recommend if you’re looking for new Mac software to help with managing your tasks. Update - Things has gone public beta with a preview download and a discount for early adopters. Check out some of the user comments on MacUpdate. Check out the daily list of our 9 Word mini-Reviews at NoodleMac, and Kate's daily in-depth Mac software reviews at PixoBebo. Off Topic #23 - Mac OS X Leopard is now at version 10.5.2 which we’re proclaiming the best yet, though we expect version 10.5.3 soon. If you haven’t upgraded yet, don’t forget that Leopard is on sale at the Mac360 Store, and so are the latest Leopard books. If you plan to order Leopard or a Leopard tips book from Amazon, please consider using the Mac360 Store to place your order (it’s really Amazon). Click Here to look at the latest Leopard books. Off Topic #58 - Do politicians use personal computers? Of course. We’ve heard Barack Obama prefers a Mac, while Hillary Clinton uses a Dell, though, apparently neither of the candidates can bowl. Does Obama’s potential vice president use a Mac? Even Clinton acknowledges Apple’s brand power but says she can’t afford a Mac. Maybe she’d win if she used a Mac.
• Article by Kate MacKenzie • Published on Wednesday, December 26, 2007
• Category: What's New • 9 Reader comment(s) • Email This • Digg This • Shop Now
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Talk Back to Kate, Ron & the Mac360 staff Jon Mark Hancock says:
I don’t see Yojimbo and Things as competing- I use Yojimbo a lot for collecting interesting web articles, notes, certain types of contact and account info, receipts, etc., and it’s been very good in that role- more reliable than SOHO Notes, where I went through some crashes and problems recovering data. Things is a GTD type of program, as stated in the article, like iGTD, and I find it’s interface to work very well for planning project tasks to execute as well as daily things that come up- even the “someday” and other categories are useful for storing task notes about things I want to do sometime, but not immediately. User Interface is a very personal thing, and while I’m an early Alpha adopter of OmniFocus for my work tasks, I really like Things for my personal planning and tracking. Remember, it’s alpha software, no where near feature complete; just today an update was released with some significant changes. Like many other developers, they do seem to be focussed to an extent on the good things Leopard offers for developer support, so I wouldn’t be surprised if at some point it became Leopard only. — Posted on Thu Jan 03 at 1:00 pm by Jon Mark Hancock
brain fart says:
Ding, ding, ding!!! There it is: ”I must say that I do a lot of thinking and list making on my subway rides, something that I can envision a Things for iPhone handling very well.” As of now the iPhone doesn’t do that kind of ‘thing’ very well, so having Things show up as an iPhone application makes perfect, perfectly good sense. — Posted on Thu Jan 03 at 12:16 pm by brain fart
jeffharris says:
cal, you’re right. I tried Yojimbo… as a Toshiro Mifune fan, how could I not?!?!?… and I actually bought DEVONthink during last year’s MacHeist and tried several more apps in that ilk. After tinkering a bit, they all required more work to use than i was willing to put into them. Although, DEVONthink and Yojimbo seem to have a different “mission” than Things. They promise a way to store all your bits and pieces of info and make it all accessible. While that’s a fine idea, just getting everything “in” and setting up an organized heirarchy didn’t seem too much different than putting stuff into a bunch of Finder folder and using Spotlight. What I’ve been using for quite some time is Brainforest. It’s a Palm outliner with a Mac application that is fully Hot Sync-able. Too bad that Palm is sliding down the tubes, but maybe the upcoming iPhone SDK will enable the Things people to make an iPhone client, or just run Things directly(?) so that the whole thing is fully portable and sync-able, too. I must say that I do a lot of thinking and list making on my subway rides, something that I can envision a Things for iPhone handling very well. — Posted on Thu Jan 03 at 12:08 pm by jeffharris
cal worthington says:
OmniFocus, DevonTHINK, and others that are loaded with features are a good example of what most of us go for first, then have regrets. Featuritis. We want features even if we don’t use them. I’ve used Microsoft Office for years and years. Then I bought the new iWork and decided to try to use it for everything that Office did. It works. Simple is more. I haven’t had a need for Word, Excel, or PowerPoint that could not be matched with iWork. I tried Things and Yojimbo and settled on the former, even though the latter has more features, more power. It was just a bit too complex for me. — Posted on Thu Jan 03 at 11:18 am by cal worthington
jeffharris says:
I’m running things under 10.4.11 with no trouble. Funny, but I didn’t see a non-Tiger disclaimer. Ignorance CAN be bliss after all! Things is quite nice! Very intuitive and fairly simple to learn and use. The interface is the same… simple, clean, elegant. I tried Omnifocus, but found it too complex for it’s own good. Software by geeks, for geeks. Being at least partially human, I prefer Things. I can’t wait to see the full release. — Posted on Thu Jan 03 at 3:18 am by jeffharris
iggy pence says:
I can’t see that Things is Leopard only, Mark. Download it and give it a try on Tiger. — Posted on Wed Jan 02 at 9:36 am by iggy pence
Mark says:
Will Things be compatible with 10.4 or will we have to move up to 10.5? — Posted on Sat Dec 29 at 6:28 pm by Mark
danny ditto says:
Color me ditto. Things is a remarkable utility as it combines an easy learning curve with plenty of utility. Things mixes iGTD with simple to do lists which can be expanded to projects. Very, very nicely done. — Posted on Wed Dec 26 at 8:31 pm by danny ditto
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