I guess I’m no different to anyone else. I have developed a way of working that 
works for me and that I am comfortable with. MLO helps me achieve what I want 
to and does it very well. I see no need to change for the sake of change or to 
fit in with an artificial constraint. Especially as MLO have the will to remove 
the constraint – not all companies are willing to do that, so credit to MLO.

 

Looking at mural.co, it appears to be more of a drawing/whiteboard tool. That’s 
great for designing a UI but I find the structured style of an outliner easier 
for clients to expand their thoughts. A client will typically come with a 
request “I want the software to do X and this is how you do that”. Their 
thinking is limited to the feature they want and they have decided how your 
software is going to achieve it. That gives me a starting point of “I want X” – 
the how is nothing to do with them; that’s my problem.

 

Once I have a requirement of “X”, I can map out the consequences of delivering 
it, so we’re all clear on what it is exactly they have asked for (most clients 
typically have a very narrow view of change requests). I can also map out 
potential extensions that make “X” more productive (which also lets me make it 
more generic and less focussed on a specific client need). I can explain why 
“X” is good but why “Y” might be better and more flexible. That can’t be done 
effectively in diagramming tools (well, not by me). 

 

I’ve found in the past that clients get a clearer understanding when they can 
see the cause/effect in a hierarchical form. It also prompts more in-depth 
thinking. I’ve lost track of the number of times I have presented a potential 
extension to a client idea and they have run with it and expanded out their 
thinking to a more comprehensive change. It’s a game – not to deliver precisely 
what they asked for but to try and tease out that additional functionality that 
you know they’re going to come back for. It makes for a happier client and 
that’s what we’re all after at the end of the day (isn’t it?). MLO does an 
excellent job of that.

 

Regards a single file, yes, I could package all of this up into a single file. 
I’m sure the 99% of MLO users who do not reach the limitation are managing 
perfectly well with one or two files. That just doesn’t work for me. I’ve 
always introduced separation into my projects, mainly because of the focus it 
gives me. If, at some stage, MLO decides the limit is 10 and strictly 10, then 
I’ll move to another tool. Dynalist gives me enough functionality and the cross 
platform abilities I need and does not limit me. It also does not charge me. I 
prefer to pay for MLO because it’s a better tool.

 

Steve

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of A. W.
Sent: Monday, August 7, 2023 1:05 PM
To: MyLifeOrganized <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [MLO] Re: Cloud sync limits

 

@steve, 

wouldnt it be easier to:

- ideate solutions with mural.co - e.g.

- let MLO to the job just for you in one file for all clients

- - with a archiving concept that then lead to two MLO files and many 
mural.co-canvases

 

==> simpler and more effective overall handling by purpose built tools? :)

Steve Barnett schrieb am Sonntag, 6. August 2023 um 22:45:03 UTC+2:

I brainstorm with the clients. As a rule they tell me what to write. It’s then 
my job to guide them to a solution that fills their needs and enhances the 
product for everyone else. That is best done in an interactive session where we 
use a tool like MLO to capture the requirement.

Sent by Steve





On 6 Aug 2023, at 21:25, Dwight <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > 
wrote:



Steve, are you saying that you share your task lists with your clients? If so 
then I totally get the need for segmentation, and I would say that your 30-file 
limit on MLO is a very appropriate deal for you, 
-Dwîght 

 

On August 6, 2023 3:39:28 AM EDT, Steven Barnett <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

I don’t charge my clients. I’m retired and do this for the fun and to keep my 
brain active, so separate licences isn’t an option.

 

There are definitely opportunities where I could merge files. My flight log v1 
is ‘finished’ so I use that file for managing bugs.  My v2 is nearing the end 
of development so has a couple of features I need to finish. My v3 is in 
requirements gathering so is pretty dynamic and gets exposed regularly to the 
client I am developing it with. I could put these in a single file but that 
risks exposing my bug list and my development list to a client who doesn’t need 
to know. Especially if I decide to move some of the functionality from v2 to 
v3. It does not pay to set expectations that you cannot achieve.

 

While developing v2 I also developed an XCFramework for a PDF generator. That’s 
a generic library that is not specific to the flight log and that will be used 
in other apps. I put that into a separate file so I could focus on it without 
the distraction of the outstanding v2 and v3 work.

 

While developing that, I also decided there were activities that I only did 
occasionally and that took too long. I wanted a tool for the Mac that could 
help me with these things, so I put that into a separate file because it’s an 
internal tool and for the Mac rather than a client tool for iOS. 

 

Having them in separate files allows me to narrow my focus to the task in hand. 
When you’re juggling a number of projects, focus is your best friend. Yes, I 
could put all of these into one file and have the top most level be the logical 
separation, but that makes it too easy to update the wrong project and to 
expose information I do not want to share with a client.

 

It is absolutely vital that client facing information is kept separate from 
anything internal.

 

The ‘one file’ concept may work for you and others. It doesn’t work for me. 
Extrapolating, I only need one Word document. Word supports sections in a 
document so every separate document could be a section in one file. I can edit 
one section at a time and can print a page range, so why would I want to create 
separate documents? It’s even better to have one document because I could 
ensure the same styles for everything I produce. Same argument for Excel as it 
has thousands of cells and multiple tabs. I could have one tab per project. Why 
would I want separate files. Apart from organisation, of course. Mind you, if I 
only had one Word and one Excel document their organisation would be easy.

 

Pushing to extremes, I could have one SQL database and use schemas to separate 
dev, Q&A, uat and prod tables. It’s possible. What could possibly go wrong? 

 

Maybe I’m not using MLO correctly. I’m using it as a brain storming tool to 
flesh out a new release of a product or web site and then as a project 
management tool to deliver the new release. I’ve always designed and developed 
a new release starting with a new project. No professional project manager 
would go with a single project file for all releases, past and future. 

 

I could bang on for hours on the advantage of separate files. I suspect every 
argument I make could be refuted in favour of a single file. My past experience 
had led to separate files. Yours has led to a single file. That’s the nice 
thing about being human; we’re not all the same.

 

Maybe you’re right. Maybe I should look for another tool. MLO have given me 30 
files for now and that’s plenty for what I am doing. 

 

I suppose I could go back to Dynalist which gives me unlimited files for free. 
I prefer MLO though. I could go back to CarbonFin Outliner, but that’s iPad 
only and I had to write my own Windows application to read the files (I’m not 
yet competent enough to write a Mac client - but I’m getting there). I prefer 
MLO though as I can run Windows, iOS and Mac.

 

I’ve written software in the past where I had a clear definition of how it was 
to be used and what could be achieved with it. Then customers got hold of it 
and did amazing things I had never contemplated. That’s the joy of writing 
software. Quite often I thought to myself that users were using it wrong… 
that’s not what I intended. But the fact that they could use it how they wanted 
to use it and not how I prescribed it should be used was so satisfying. MLO 
have done the same. They let me use it how I want to use it and, when I came up 
against an arbitrary limitation, they fixed the limit. All credit to them.

Steve Barnett





On 5 Aug 2023, at 23:23, imajeff <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > 
wrote:

Steve could you enlighten me on what is less managable? I simply put unrelated 
tasks in separate folders. The only reason I have two actual files is because 
one is for my employer and the other is personal, on my devices at home.

If I was working with a file for each client say in my contract work and it was 
necessary to keep each database separate, then mybe it would be worth charging 
enough to pay a separate license for each client.

Then again, Andre did say you could arrange to have more than 10 for some 
special case, so I'm happy to see that's possible.

On Friday, August 4, 2023 at 12:52:54 PM UTC-6 Steven Barnett wrote:

I get it. So much of software is compromises and you set a limit. I appreciate 
that and fully understand your reasoning. From my side, having spent the last 
45 years writing software and managing projects (simple and scarily complex) 
I’ve developed the habit of separating projects. 

 

I love using MLO for managing the projects I am involved in now I’m retired but 
old habits die hard and splitting projects that are not logically connected is 
second nature. I could merge some of my projects and reduce the file count but 
that would make them less manageable. 

 

MLO does everything I want of it. It’s an excellent tool. I do my thinking on 
the iPad, sync to the Mac when doing Mac development and sync to Windows for 
everything else and for printing. It’s a great workflow.

 

My previous tool (CarbonFin Outliner) was a good tool and solved the problem by 
letting me sync to OneDrive. Sadly, it has no Mac app and the iPad app won’t 
run on the M2 Mac. I wrote my own tool for Windows. Syncing to OneDrive was its 
major advantage. MLO beats it hands down in every other way.

 

Maybe I need a different project management package. I doubt that would work 
for me as MLO doesn’t over complicate things the way full project management 
tools do. 

 

Maybe you could take a tiered approach to cloud. I’d happily pay a little extra 
for the extra files.

Steve Barnett





On 4 Aug 2023, at 19:13, Andrey Tkachuk (MLO) <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Hi Steve,

 

>I seem to have hit a limit on the number of projects I can sync to the cloud 
>sync service

Yes, by default there is a limit of 10 cloud files (not MLO projects) that a 
user can synchronize with one account.

 

>Bit of a pain, but at least they acknowledge the problem nd, who knows, they 
>my fix it before I renew.

This is more of a limitation than a problem. Since we pay Amazon Web Services 
for each request to the MLO cloud, we had to set a limit to prevent abuse of 
the system and control the workload. 
The limit we set is satisfactory for almost all of our users. In addition, we 
can increase the limit manually for some users who request it.
In the future, we will consider how to optimize this behavior for users 
requiring more resources while keeping the load manageable. 

 

Thanks,

Andrey. 

On Wednesday, August 2, 2023 at 2:53:18 AM UTC+3 [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>  wrote:

I had a response today. Apparently there is a limit of 10 and, if you need 
more, they have to update it manually. I will have to contact them whenever I 
renew my cloud sync because it will revert to 10 each time I renew. Bit of a 
pain, but at least they acknowledge the problem nd, who knows, they my fix it 
before I renew.

On Tuesday, 1 August 2023 at 23:12:20 UTC+1 [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>  wrote:

I've never run into this.  I just did a quick count and have a little under 40 
active projects.  

On Tuesday, August 1, 2023 at 7:25:08 AM UTC-5 Steven Barnett wrote:

I seem to have hit a limit on the number of projects I can sync to the cloud 
sync service. It has limited me to 10. I tend to do a lot of small projects, so 
have a lot of separate outlines to sync at the same time. Now I’m stuck on the 
11th because I cannot sync it.

 

I contacted support, but got no response. Does anyone here know how I might get 
round this limit please? I don’t want to start merging projects as that won’t 
make much sense organisationally.

 

Thanks

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