All Your Chips Are Belong to KaDo List

Apologies for the old school Zero Wing reference in the title. I couldn’t resist.

Another euphoric moment in the creation of KaDo List has arrived. I just installed it and put it through its paces on every type of chip that Apple offers or has recently offered:

  1. G4 and G5 PowerPC
  2. Intel Core Duo
  3. 64-bit Core 2 Duo
  4. 64-bit Dual-Core Xeon

It ran super fast with no issues at all — quite an exciting moment for a geek like myself. Kudos to Apple for building tools and APIs that make this possible.

Now, back to that About box…

Comments (14) left to “All Your Chips Are Belong to KaDo List”

  1. Mogore wrote:

    What’s a good news, I’m on G4 PPC, and hope to test your software soon.

  2. Jon wrote:

    Thanks, Mogore. You’re on the list.

  3. Sean wrote:

    Look’s great … I have a G4 and an Intel macbook … I’d love to give her a spin.

  4. Jon wrote:

    Sounds good, Sean. You’re on the list.

  5. Michael Daigle wrote:

    Hi Jon - I’ve been following your progress for a while now, and I’m glad to see you’re getting close. I’d love to test it on my new MacBook (hint, hint)

  6. Jon wrote:

    Ok, you’re in, Michael. Thanks for checking in.

  7. dan wrote:

    Ka-Do looks very appealing and straight-to-subject. can’t wait to test it. when do you expect this will happen? :)

  8. Patrick wrote:

    I’ve just spent the entire morning researching GTD and GTD tools.behaviors for Mac OS X. Very excited about KaDo List. Would love to test it when it’s ready.

  9. Jon wrote:

    @dan:

    Thanks! If you want to be on the beta tester list, I can certainly add you. As for the timeline [pulled away by cane from stage left…]

    @Patrick:

    Thank you! You are on the list.

  10. dan wrote:

    i wil surely love to beta test this nice piece of gtd soft. thanx.

  11. Jon wrote:

    @dan:

    You are very kind. I have placed you on the list.

  12. Federico wrote:

    I would love to test the product as well, it looks very interesting and could be the end of my/our long research for a really nice and simple GTD tool for the Macintosh.

  13. Heather wrote:

    I’ve been using TrimPath’s NextAction. But the architecture resulted in reliability problems and I’d given up on it. . . . After reading over your blog and looking at the screenshots, I’m eager to see what you’d come up and would love to help test.

  14. David wrote:

    Actiontastic is a great step in the GTD direction for OS X!

    A few suggestions that would make this easier and faster to use are below. I’m not suggesting an over-blown application, but one with enough “power” so that entry is simple, fast, and very flexible for any kind of project and action.

    1. If I’m on the Projects page (tab), and I’ve selected a project (for example, “Plan Trip to Spain”), we can currently click the “+” symbol to get a new action in this project. However, there should be two other methods of getting a new action: (a) some key sequence, and (b) double-clicking on any line in the right-hand window. I agree with other users who have said that there also needs to be a way that when we press RETURN after typing in an Action, a new action appears under it. This would allow us to enter a long list of associated actions.

    2. The same thing holds true for the Projects screen.

    3. Right now, the list of Projects and Contexts is sorted alphabetically, and I can’t find a way to rearrange them.

    4. Subfolders - MUST have subfolders! — for Projects AND for Actions! If we want, we can then group Actions into logical groups.

    5. iCal integration, as many others have already commented.

    6. Actions need to be a bit more sophisticated in terms of data they can hold; specifically, we need to be able to include links to Internet sites, links (aliases) to files on our computer, etc.

    7. If the length of the text of an Action is longer than the Action column, there is no way to read it. Double-clicking on the Action row only allows us to edit it. We need a way to show/edit more info per Action item.

    8. Due dates for Action items AND Projects! For example, every action may have a specific due date, and the Project as a whole may have a due date. Due dates need to be shown in the main window so we can sort on them.

    9. It would make entering Actions faster if every new action inherited the Context of the previous one entered; if we change its context, then any subsequent Actions would assume this one. This would save a bit of time rather than having to set the Context for every Action.

    Alternatively (or additionally), there could be a key sequence that we could define for each of our contexts to quickly set them, or some other fast way to set the contexts.

    Alternatively (or additionally), allow users to use shift-click and option-click to select multiple lines of Actions, then set the Context for all of them at once (similar to the way iTunes allows us to select any group of songs, Get Info, and change anything for all of them at once.

    10. What if Action A MUST be started/completed before we can do Action B? How will Actiontastic handle this? One way would be dependencies (starting Action B is dependent on starting or completing Action A).

    We’re all looking forward to seeing the future development of this application!

    Best luck with it!