jamez
Jamez
jamez

I've been doing exactly this; I'm actually very happy to be wrong (perhaps I make too many negative assessments), so admitting I'm wrong has never been a problem for me. Saying it, however, has always been a little tougher. What I tend to do is find the person and privately tell them one-on-one that I was wrong and

I love this, except that it's not nearly as easy to use as Boomerang and I rarely have so many emails to schedule that I'd need to pay for the unlimited service from Boomerang.

I voted for Any.do, but none of these work well as task managers. I've used every single one (and hundreds of others too), and I haven't found a single one that works well. The reason: they're just list-taking apps with functions that help with writing tasks down as lists. That's it.

I've been diagnosed with ADD and ADHD separately, and don't think either one is actually a disability. I learned to listen by focus. If you have a specific goal in mind and you're speaking with someone about something to do with that goal, then the only thing that matters to you (if you've got ADHD or not) is to

Working on it! And you don't need an Android phone to use it, we also have a web-app.

Not worried, not saying anything went wrong. Saying that the bigger the project, the higher probability there is that there are mistakes. Size of projects are equally proportional to the number of mistakes there are.

With something as big as an OS, something wrong can always happen. In fact, with something as small as a 2MB app, something wrong can always happen.

Do IM apps really matter anymore? I used to use IM+, but stopped because all my messaging usage wen to Google Hangouts, iMessage, and What's App (and Slack for work). The only exception is IRC, which I just use Colloquy. It's easier to just stick with the individual client unless you still use a ton of different chat

No gold master, no warning...then again not that big a deal. Can't wait to see how many stupid little bugs there are here, especially after the 7.0.6 update was rushed out less than two weeks ago.

I love this idea, but the road it'll go down is treachorous. Now it's just press enter. Then it'll be have a camera and let us access it to prove you're watching it (but don't worry, we'll pay more money for that!). Then those videos will be sold to the NSA or worse and we'll have a nice debacle to handle.

Why stop?

As someone who's done this professionally, I can tell you that it's not hard. What is hard, however, is actually making enough money for the work you do.

For everyone who will undoubtedly ask very soon, no it does not transfer iOS push notifications to your computer. For iOS, it's essentially a transfer system to and from your machine/other devices. iOS security doesn't allow for showing push notifications to another device.

I just have one thing to say: Wooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooot!

Both lead into each other. If you're creative, you're more likely to cheat (because getting ahead, regardless of the situation, is the goal). And if you're more likely to cheat, then you'll get caught or questioned or both and have to use that creativity to get out of the situation. Whether you succeed or not will

Indeed, not available on the Play Store from Android, but the link worked and it is available to download. Just installed. Cheers!

Not available on Nexus 4, unfortunately.

Final followup: tried it on another event, failed to even show the "current" status to do. Giving up on this Android build, definitely half-baked.

Quick followup, failed to load for After the event when I selected it. Sadface.

Followup 1: Before the event, you get four options: Directions, "I'm Late", Get Taxi, and "Invitees". #2 provides you a means to communicate via email with everyone, which is frankly a bit useless in the implementation. #3 is fairly smart (it knows that I'm already at the meeting location, so no, I can't get a taxi