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I Want a Pony: Snapshots of a Dream Productivity App
Merlin Mann | Jan 5 2005
There’s an early episode of The Simpsons where Homer learns he has a long-lost half-brother named Herb who’s a major automobile mogul. Out of love for his newfound family, Herb lets Homer design and build his ultimate car. The result is a piece of pure American id, in which Homer’s most extravagant obsessions combine to create an unmanufacturable $82,000 boondoggle—complete with bubble windows and a place to put a really, really big fountain drink. In that pioneering national spirit of favoring geegaws and fantastic chimeras over practicality, here are a few completely random ideas about a notional productivity application I’d like to see someday (as well as few bitches about the lame state of the ones we have now). See, the thing of it is, there must be something in the air right now, because I’ve talked to no fewer than six (6) people in the last three months who want to build some kind of a new productivity app. I must say, the ideas so far are varied and novel in their approaches to tackling a basic set of problems. There’s a good deal of overlap to be sure, but there’s enough divergence to make me tell one particularly talented friend:
So here you go. A bunch of nutty bullets about a non-existent program:
There’s a million other specifics that I won’t go into just now (fast and savable searches, endless import/export options, robust support for structured text everywhere …), but I at least wanted to give a flavor for what’s important to me and the way that I like to work. I suspect that most of us feel kind of stuck right now; there are a few servicable (but extremely dull and inflexible) productivity apps with which we’ve had to learn to satisfice. Our expectations have gotten depressingly low, and, unfortunately, they’ve been glumly met at most every turn. Bloated proprietary formats, locked up information, non-standard menus and key commands, and totally weak categorizing are just the beginning of the problems in a vertical that, to me, has been feeling moribund for five or more years now. It’ll be interesting to see whether Apple pulls out this rumored iWork package at MacWorld next week, but that still leaves us with scant options for integrated calendaring, mail, and note-taking. Regardless of what Apple does, I would still love to see the nerds keep collaborating openly on novel solutions for collecting, mining, organizing, and streamlining the way we deal with the growing amount of “stuff” in our lives. I'm not necessarily asking for a silver bullet in a single app or one Great Idea™—these things take time, iteration, and patience. It's just that there are so many wonderful sites and web apps that are getting aspects of this exactly right. Shouldn’t we expect at least some fraction of that power and innovation from the software that runs our lives? So: “blue sky.” What do you want from an unlimitedly awesome productivity app? What’s your biggest hangup with whatever your current apps are? 66 Comments
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![]() Ethan: Spotlight will manage both...Submitted by JoshD (not verified) on January 5, 2005 - 4:37pm.
Ethan: Spotlight will manage both Mail.app and iChat logs, apparently. So that one bit of a feature will apparently be taken care of, yay. It appears that in 10.4, the common threads that "average" (as opposed to ubergeek) OS X users commonly use will be fairly well stitched together. On the MacNN message boards some four years ago, there was a user with the handle "rm -rf /etc" who expressed the idea of next-generation file handling in a memorable and expressive way: 2. It is not the pot that is important; it is the water that it carries It is not the walls of the house that are important; it is the space between them. It is not the organizing mechanisms that are relevant; it is the information we seek to organize.
We seek to organize memories like photographs, moving pictures and sounds. We seek to organize our finances and our lives We seek to analyze data We do not seek to organize 'files' To this, now, I would add the threads of my life that I have extended into the web: my flickr images, private and personal, locked, and unlocked. My personal wiki, my LJ friends, my fiancée's iCalendar with her work schedule, the Basecamp project site where we're planning the wedding. These are the pieces of my life, and I'm uncertain that a specific "productivity app" is what we're missing to fit these together; we have (most of?) the basic tools already, but what we lack is something to fit them together. Or to put it another way, there's nothing special about index cards. It's the conceptual framework David Allen provides that turns them into an unbeatable tool. If we consider the chunks of data as simply that: atomic chunks of data, and seek to connect them flexibly, I think that will be most valuable. If that makes any sense. :) Maybe not, it's late and I'm tired... » POSTED IN:
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