Seems to be.
Seems to be.
Ive not looked at this since signing up, but had another look given the above. The conclusion - its almost exactly the same as Asana, not just in concept but in look and layout. Wouldn't be surprised if those two either merged, or had a little catfight, given the similarities.
Yes, took several goes to get in, managed in the end though.
Mercifully my laptop is missing most of the daft keys. Granted i don't personally use the ` ¦ ¬ key all that much, but its useful for others. The only one remaining is the good ol' Alt Gr - save for very occasionally trying to pull some sort of Spanish phonetic out of MS Word its pretty much useless.
What do Yahoo even do these days? they seem to have random fingers in pies, but its hard to see their strategy. Perhaps all they want is to hoover up residual income from the various forms of ad related revenues that exist, but that seems a bit of a bottom feeder existence.
My rule of thumb for stir frys is that less is more. A protein, a veg plus the garlic-chilli-ginger combo works best for me.
Its hard to explain in a quantifiable way, but lots of things to towards creating the culture of an organisation. Your location, whether you use Macs or PCs, whether your office layout is corporate or funky, whether you use first names with your customers or surnames - and what you wear is part of that equation. Why…
One thing Id love is a way to have Android's task killer leave apps alone without having to have them in the notification bar. I occasionally end up with Tasker, Viber, Skype, a music player and my doubletwist alarm in there cluttering up the view, pushing useful notifications down the list.
One problem Ive found with Swiftkey, which would be even more pronounced in this case, is that I tend to write/type differently depending on the app. I get the same suggestions for Twitter as I do for my work emails (as far as I can tell). It'd be nice to have a per app dictionary.
Id be surprised if it didn't make its way over. Its Apple who are likely to have a problem with it, not Google. Once you got the infrastructure in place you want as large an audience as possible. Unless there's some technical barrier, I'd expect to see a release a few months after it goes live on other devices.
This is a dead cert to happen. MS are trying to harmonise the user experience across Windows 8/Surface, the Windows phone(s) and the Xbox. They want people to be able to buy music on their phone, listen to it on their Xbox, or buy a film on their Xbox and watch it on the go on their MS Surface. They already charge by…
You certainly have to have some fondness for your line of work, but I don't think that "following your passion at work" is the key to happiness. I have a passion for cooking, but Im more than happy following that passion in my spare time, rather than doing it all day every day and seeing the backside of the industry.…
My mother in law has a Lavazza equivalent to the Nespresso, which is fine for its purpose. Surprisingly good air wand too. But ultimately the quality comes not the method but the bean. Sure you can fuck a good bean up, but you cant make a poor bean taste good in even the best coffee machine.
Pretty hard to say best. By what measure? Best quality coffee at home, probably a pour over. Most flexible? French press, makes 3 or 4 cups for zilcho effort with a totally respectable taste. Best outright? Whatever that thing is they're using at the Nude Espresso Roastery, Brick Lane.
I was looking for a new mindmap app, by coincidence. However this looks to have the same problem as a lot of the others - the words are placed at the end of each line, rather than along it. Sounds small but for me it makes all the difference. The words along the line style is a lot more space efficient and to me looks…
I think it falls between two stools. It manages to be different enough to fool people used to Windows, but not intuitive to completely new users. How do you know to type a programme name to start searching for example? Most people will find it by accident.
Another pain in the arse that some people may not consider. By moving from a one off purchase to a subscription service, you're moving where the item sits on the balance sheet for a business. If I'm running a corporate department and I have a surplus in my budget at the end of the year I can purchase new software as…
Wait until you try my BBQ then Microwave then Deep Fry method - its truly the One Path.
Toodledo remains a good option. Indeed Ive found it the most flexible of all Ive tried, particularly if you want Project->Sub-task structures to your ToDo lists, as well as @Contexts. They dont have first party apps for Android (they do for iOS) but I think DGT GTD is the best todo app Ive used on Android.
I think this reflects a stage of how people are beginning to learn to manage information in huge amounts. Information equals options, opportunities. It also equals work, overload, stress. If you let it. And this is a new thing. 30 years ago the information available to the average Joe was far less.