On Tue, 2002-10-08 at 11:16, Janus Christensen wrote: > On Sat, 2002-10-05 at 20:34, Oliver Kurlvink wrote: > > > any comments to this? :) > > I absolutely agree. .-)
Me too! > In every calendar program that features to-do lists I have used, there > is a disconnect between the calendar and the to-do list. I can remember > to use and check my calendar, but the to-do list remains largely unused, > because correlation between the calendar and the to-do list is hard even > when viewed side-by-side. In fact, when I do use the to-do list it is > for items that have no definite time constraints. Actually, because the to-do list also lacks another feature that I would like, it ends up being the only part of evolution that I never ever use at all, which is a real shame because I have need for a good to-do list app. The feature in a to-do list that *I* need is unlimited levels of sub-tasks of tasks. What I actually end up doing is just keeping a text-editor permanently open where I note down all the things I have to do with dates and time in parenthesis and use indentation to group tasks. I use it constantly, but it isn't ideal, and it would be fantastic to be able to use evolution's tasks list *and* have tasks integrated with the calendar. I'd also like to see appointments and anniversaries in contacts to immediately show up in evolution's calendar. > In a collaborative environment it gets even worse, because a co-worker > might check my calender to see what I am doing, when I have time for a > meeting, etc, but doesn't check my to-do list. If I want to publish that > on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, I am spending all my available time > on a particular task, I make entries in the calendar, since that way I > am sure co-workers can see I am busy. Besides, the to-do list items do > not say anything about the work load each task represents. > > The counter argument for this is that, that the calendaring and to-do > features in a program such as Evolution isn't meant as a planning tool > such as Mr. Project (http://mrproject.codefactory.se/). > > What one *could* consider was some sort of integration between Mr > Project and Evolution, such that appointments in the Evolution calendar > are known to Mr Project, and projects and tasks in Mr Project could > somehow be displayed in the Evolution Calendar. Some would probably say > that this is outside of the scope of Evolution, and I am myself not all > to sure if such an integration is a good idea. In an ideal world, evolution, mr. project, gnome time tracker, and gnucash would all be so tightly integrated that my invoices would practically write themselves! but what you say about the closeness of fit between project management software and groupware/pim software like evolution is quite right, and is something the evolution developers and mr project developers should sit down and think about. It may be the case the evoution itself should swallow up mr project altogether. Best, Darren -- ====================================================================== D. D. Brierton [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.dzr-web.com Trying is the first step towards failure (Homer Simpson) ====================================================================== _______________________________________________ evolution maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/evolution
