On Mon, 25 Sep 2017 03:21:51 -0400, Mycroft Jones
<mycr...@reactor-core.org> wrote:
I'm wondering if org-mode can do this:
I have many tasks. Some are one off. But many are tasks that will take
a
period of time, days, weeks, months. I need to schedule a bit of time
every
day. Over time I can complete the tasks by plugging away. But I have
so many.
Half hour chunks work for some tasks, 1 or 2 or 3 hour chunks work best
for others.
1) writing 3 different books
2) learning 2 different languages
3) 2 different types of exercise exercise
4) 3 different ongoing tasks at work
5) watching videos that friends send me
6) reading books on my night stand
7) various one-off tasks
8) scheduled items, where I have to do them at a scheduled time.
So, for each broad category of task, there are subtasks. So far, it
looks like
orgmode is good. But, what I'd like is to automatically generate
scheduling
suggestions for the day. For instance, if I've been putting too much
time into
languages, then schedule more time for writing the books. And if I've
focused
too much on one book, remind me to put time into another book. I'd like
the
scheduler to be a sort of time-accounting system that suggests work for
the day
in a way that balances the tree.
Within each branch of the tree, I'd like the branches to be allocated
roughly
equal time, over a period of weeks and months, on a day to day basis.
Is there a simple workflow in orgmode that can do this? I haven't done
elisp
for 10 years, but I'm comfortable with it. Would this be simple to
implement?
Mycroft
Hmmm. I have similar problems, but on a somewhat more difficult level. A
lot of my tasks are farm-related and are thus self-driven rather than
org-mode-driven. For instance, two barn roofs need repair, and seeing them
listed as TODO in an agenda does nothing to get started on them, or on the
sub-tasks necessary to starting the work on the roofs. But when I look at
the roofs, and thus am reminded of "* TODO Repair barn roofs", it's always
when I'm already at work on something immediately more pressing.
But it gets worse! If I think of a task that needs to be done, and write
it into one of my TODO lists, then I tend to ignore it. Adding it to the
schedule dismisses it from any immediate concern, and (as I alluded
before) much of my work is outside, on the farm, nowhere near my computer.
It's almost like Ko-Ko's solution in G&S's operetta 'The Mikado':
Ko-Ko: When Your Majesty says "Let a thing be done", it’s as good as
done, practically it is done, because Your Majesty’s will is law. Your
Majesty says "Kill a gentleman", and the gentleman is to be killed,
consequently that gentleman is as good as dead, practically he is dead,
and if he is dead, why not say so?
The Mikado: I see. [Dramatic Pause] Nothing could possibly be
more...satisfactory!
My problem with org mode itself thus becomes yet another action item (to
be ignored):
* TODO Devise a way to project my agenda (in unavoidable brilliance) onto
the side of the barn, or perhaps embroider it into the fleece of my sheep
(who * TODO need to be shorn).
Plausible (or implausible) solutions to my problem or to Mycroft's are
hereby solicited.