1. I understand the confusion. MLO is not really a scheduling app-- you 
have to think of it more like a To Do list, when you can set dates on 
things. People who are heavily calendar-oriented (like myself) need to keep 
track of things as they relate to time in general. For example, if MLO 
outline isn't organized by time (and whose would be?!), I might have two 
subtasks next to each other, where one happens Monday and one happens on 
Friday. They may be together because they're logically part of, say, the 
same project, but if there are other things happening on Monday that are 
elsewhere in my outline, I do not see them in MLO that way.

By pairing with the calendar, I can have the events appear according to 
their dates and times which, for any person guided by when things happen, 
makes it clear what's happening when.

Even so, you're beginning to brush up against the paradox between two ways 
of managing time, but that's probably the subject for a book.

2. There are several ways to arrange this, and I have worked on them 
*extensively*.

Firstly, understand that MLO, like any application (both mobile app, and 
desktop) is *document-oriented*. This means that when you open the 
application, you *also* open up a document-- in this case, the document is 
a particular tree with its body of tasks.

The synchronization lets you synchronize either a chosen document, *or* 
even just a selected branch within a document.

In my own case, to keep from having to switch between documents when I am 
working with others, I prefer to add the shared tasks to a branch within my 
tree, and then share only that branch of shared tasks. Another approach 
would be to have a personal file, and then a shared file, and the other 
person only has access to the shared file. None of this is secure, however, 
and any person with a login to your cloud (necessary for them to sync with) 
could sync any of your files they so choose.

And since MLO doesn't have any sort of roles attached to its tasks, you 
must create them using tags, or other indicators, so you know who owns what.

You will probably find older discussions (some from me, possibly) about how 
to do tags (historically, they're "Contexts"-- but we've often overloaded 
them for many other purposes-- now that tags exist, which I haven't played 
with, this could change). My Context system is very complex, so I have 
categories of them, which I designate with things like @loc_ for locations, 
or @who_ for people, or @tim_ for my time management stuff.

As far as licensing, they'd just need a copy of whichever MLO app they're 
going to use, and access to your cloud.

On Sunday, December 1, 2019 at 2:16:01 AM UTC-8, Firstmon Lastmon wrote:
>
> Not familiar with MLO yet, can someone please assist with a couple of 
> questions.
>
> 1. MLO has the ability to sync with Google Calendar.Why do users need to 
> use both MLO and Google Calendar. Can MLO be used to replace Google 
> Calendar?
>
>
> 2. Is there a 2 user MLO licence? I have seen there are ways to keep 
> separate lists for Home & Work. It would be possible for 2 people to have 2 
> completely separate sets of Work tasks; could the same 2 people have a 
> combined set of non work tasks (eg pickup up kids thursday 5th December 
> 3:30pm, and be able to make additions/changes from either end and have 
> these sync'ed?
>
>
> Thanks for any assistance.
>

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