Hi, 

I've been using wmii-3 for some time now, and I would like to know how do 
people actually use tags. There are many possible usages, and I think 
documenting them may prove a good way to make constructively criticize the 
idea to make it even more useful. 

Reading web pages about wmii and this list, it seem that the most common and 
obvious use is to have tags for various tasks - email reading, chat, web 
browsing, system monitoring, etc. I personally began using tags this way, 
together with numerical tags as temporary work spaces for tasks that didn't 
fit anywhere. It is easy to modify wmiirc so that the applications I 
regularly use for certain tasks are automatically tagged. 

Recently, I began also tagging by projects instead of tasks - Thesis, 
Personal, wmii stuff, etc. For example, I keep a window of my IRC client 
(each channel have it's own window) with the channel of my local free 
software advocacy group, a (copy) of mail client window and a web browser 
page with the wiki of the same group open in a view for all work related to 
it.
 
This is quite different, and adding wmiirc entries for automatic tagging for 
this is more complex - in fact I didn't began doing it yet. One advantage (at 
least for me): I switch view less often. I feel it is more in line with 
the "dynamical window management" philosophy: projects are created and 
removed as needed, while tasks like mail and IRC are unlikely to change and 
window, because tasks are more defined by the applications we use to 
accomplish them than by the actual type of work we want to do. This 
difference is also present in the way we configure automatic tagging, which 
is a lot more task-friendly than project-friedly.

Of course, there is no hard line between "project" and "task", but it seem to 
make a difference to think more in one way than in the other. 

-- 
Yannick Delbecque

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