I hope they look at the defunct program ECCO from NetManage. That was the best PIM/organizer I've used to date. ECCO used an outline metaphor with the ability to crosslink items from one outline into any other. For example, you could create a project outline with a number of nested tasks to complete, and then link items from the project outline into your todo list, complete with due dates, priorities, and whatever else you wanted to add. This was a very powerful way to organize things, once the concept was mastered.
Ages ago, I had a part time college job as a computer operator for a factory using an IBM System 3. One task was loading the line printer with paper. The (male) person who trained me for the job stressed that users liked their printouts with the first printed sheet visible as the top sheet of the fan folded stack of paper. To accomplish this, the printer needed to be loaded with the first perf'ed fold sticking outward and the second fold inward. He said, "Remember, tits high, ass low."
That expression still comes to mind every time I put batteries in a flashlight.
One small step for [a] man, one giant leap for robotkind.
I hope they look at the defunct program ECCO from NetManage. That was the best PIM/organizer I've used to date. ECCO used an outline metaphor with the ability to crosslink items from one outline into any other. For example, you could create a project outline with a number of nested tasks to complete, and then link items from the project outline into your todo list, complete with due dates, priorities, and whatever else you wanted to add. This was a very powerful way to organize things, once the concept was mastered.
"...over three hundered seperate titles..."
Ages ago, I had a part time college job as a computer operator for a factory using an IBM System 3. One task was loading the line printer with paper. The (male) person who trained me for the job stressed that users liked their printouts with the first printed sheet visible as the top sheet of the fan folded stack of paper. To accomplish this, the printer needed to be loaded with the first perf'ed fold sticking outward and the second fold inward. He said, "Remember, tits high, ass low." That expression still comes to mind every time I put batteries in a flashlight.