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I have a context "@Waiting" A lot of standalone tasks have that status. For example, if I buy
something online and it's supposed to show up next Tuesday before
8PM I'll create a task "received widget from storename" with start
set to Tuesday 20:00 and context @waiting. If there is any sort of
deadline, or date by which there will be problems if this isnt
done, I set due date. This will never show up in my to-do lists,
once or twice a day I check my WAITING view, which shows all
uncompleted tasks whose contexts include @waiting, sorted by
startdate. Overdue stuff is red and generally at the top, stuff
that should be happening is green and near the top. I generally do
not look at the future items in black but sometimes I will glance
at it to get a sense of what's coming. If there's an urgency about
it I will star it which will put it on my to do list. I use the same context but applied a little differently for
points in a project where I have to wait for someone or something
before proceeding. I will generally create a separate task for the
waiting. For example, if I give a document to a proofreader, and
when I get it back I send it to the customer, I do not consider
the waiting to be a condition of either the deliver to the proof
reader or the delivery to the customer. I would probably have
something like - Deliver to proofreader @Documents The above sequence would probably be set up in a project with "complete tasks in order" or else explicit dependencies if needed. the waiting tasks would have the earliest possible date to receive the proofread document as the start date and the latest acceptable return date as the due date. If it's not obvious who is proofreading it I would put the proofreader's name in the text tag. I have a folder for waiting tasks. If a task has somewhere else to be, like in a project, it does not need the waiting folder, but standalone stuff goes to the waiting folder to keep it from cluttering up the inbox. I have another view called ProjectWork, which looks at all of the
projects in my WORK folder and shows the NextAction (as set by the
Show Actions filter) so one task per project -Dwight On 2/12/2021 08:11, Heinz wrote:
I used @waiting as a MLO context for a couple of years but turned away from it because it feels so different from the „real“ contexts I prefer to use. As my choice of task prioritizing is flags, I am using now a low priority flag color (blue) for waiting tasks. If seeing a result from a waiting task is more urgent I combine it with a due date. What works best for me is a „My Day“ view, which is grouped by contexts and prioritized by flags within each group.-- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "MyLifeOrganized" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/mylifeorganized/25b93436-cc21-7f51-a2a0-2d49f14a2f91%40gmail.com. |
- [MLO] How do you mark GTD's Next Action and Waiting Fo... [email protected]
- [MLO] Re: How do you mark GTD's Next Action and W... Stéph
- [MLO] Re: How do you mark GTD's Next Action a... Stéph
- [MLO] Re: How do you mark GTD's Next Acti... Stephen Jones
- [MLO] Re: How do you mark GTD's Next ... Heinz
- Re: [MLO] Re: How do you mark GT... Dwight Arthur
