jamez
Jamez
jamez

As much as I like Cal's design, the implementation and actual usage is...iffy at best. Just doesn't provide the functionality for a real calendar. That said, I love this idea for HeadsUp...though it seems I can't use it until my next event is actually coming up within some time frame. So I'll sit here and wait, since

Indigo for Android was great, and I just downloaded this thanks to the twitter post (thanks Alan!), and it's great! But these guys clearly have a lot of stuff missing. I'd recommend you download it (because it's free) and wait for them to have an update. If you've used the Android app, you'll need to do "forget my

Let me get back to you on that. Figuring it out.

All I could think of:

Used it, not using it anymore. Simple and straightforward, but Hackervision is much better. Using the web with all colors inverted is fine until you get to pictures. At least with Hackervision you have all non-HTML5 content in it's original form.

Actually think it's a great deal regardless of the upgrade. Even assuming you don't get it, it's a sweet deal. Parallels Access is kickass, Fantastical is way better than the crap Apple gives you with iCal, 1Password is great, and I have no idea about the rest of it. I've got Parallels already (and never use it

This. So hard.

The real danger is what happens when you stop listening to someone (else) in charge of it...and we all get there at some point. Ahh, willpower.

Can't stand the Rubik's Cube. I get it, I get the principle, but I swear I hate how damn difficult it is to adjust the damn thing and I can never finish the damn puzzle because it JUST STARTS TO GET SO DAMN FRUSTRATING!!!!!

Yes, puzzles! Love puzzles, though after I solve them they lose their flavor, so to speak, for me. I've got a few...my problem is that I'd buy one, then complete it before I got home, which was sort of a downer...like hey, I just bought that! What the hell!

I've tried this years ago, and realized that I was too smart for my own good. More specifically (and realistically, because it has nothing to do with intelligence) I can't trick myself into giving myself a reward for a task that I know needs to be done. Why not just reward myself first?! Or just delay the task because

I've been using HackerVision (Chrome Extension) to much success on the Mac (it's much worse on PC for some reason) and it's great. Will try this out too.

I've been using Reporter today and I like the way it works, though it's a bit pricey for another personal analytics tool. The direction is more friendly than others because it actually provides useful data in a way that I wouldn't have expected that only takes a minute or two at a time.

I'm running on 7.1beta5, which is also a heavy battery hog...but yeah, when I turned Moves off the battery lasted 20% longer. I'm on my phone constantly throughout the day but with the beta, phone calls, constant data, and at least one app with motion tracking, I'm charging the damn thing twice a day.

The boring answer: pen and paper. I do everything else via keyboard or touchscreen, and if I didn't keep actual lists I might forget how to write by hand! If I'm without a notebook, I use Notes on my iPhone.

FFS, I keep deleting Moves because as gorgeous of an app it is, it is the biggest power drain on my 5s by a longshot. And every time I delete it, a day or two later, another app I get says "HEY! CONNECT MOVES FOR MORE DATA!". And now they issue an update like this and...ugh.

Shoot! And I was just there a few weeks ago. Bah.

Hell, I know where that top picture is...but I can't place it. UGH!

The point of this test is to write a Q on your forehead as quickly as possible, meaning not to have the time to think about it. But if you think about it, you break the test. Oops, now I have no idea if I'm a good liar anymore...

I don't think it's a question of complicated vs simple, but more of purpose. Right now calendaring is a struggle between two people to hit a proper date/time to meet, talk, or whatever. (That's actually not calendaring...it's scheduling.) The reason that iCal and other apps and calendaring systems (like Google