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Getting Sandy in my Face

For quite a while now, Tasks Jr has been my task management tool of choice. I switched to it from my own Tinderbox-based system after I decided that having access to my list from any ‘net-connected system was important to me. But now I’ve switched again.

Over time, the aesthetics of Tasks Jr’s design, its limitations (which are resolved by the more advanced versions, I must admit), and the fact that a recent MySQL/PHP update at my web host caused problems made me think about finding another solution.

So I’ve begun the great migration to Values of n’s Sandy. Its integration with Twitter and the almost magical email-based interface are icing on the cake, beyond what Tasks Jr offered.

The aphorism “out of sight, out of mind” could have been created with me in mind. To make the most of any system, Tasks Jr or Sandy, I need to have it constantly open and visible. With a web site, it’s easy to lose the window when opening another URL, or simply absentmindedly closing a Safari window. I’ve tried every trick I can think of to keep my task list open and at-hand, including Dock icons, setting it as my browser home page, and even the nifty WebDesktop application.

But thanks to a comment here on 43Folders, I discovered Fluid. The work of Todd Ditchendorf, Fluid allows you to create WebKit-based dedicated browsers for webapps. In other words, it makes a standalone app whose sole purpose is to connect to a specific website. This allowed me to create a Sandy application that lives in my Dock, and I don’t lose my place when opening web pages or surfing with Safari.

You can use Fluid with any web application of course, and there’s a Fluid Icons group on Flickr where you can get images to use with the app. Thanks to Rael at Values of n, I uploaded a Sandy-specific icon the other day, which you see in action in the screenshot above.

So far, the combination of Sandy and Fluid is working out quite well. Sandy is smart, easy to use, and reminds me of appointments via Twitter and SMS. Thanks to Fluid, my Sandy digest is omnipresent to keep me on task while at the computer. Give both of them a whirl and see if they don’t work well for you, too.


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austin.moody's picture

Re: Getting Sandy in my Face

Those of us lost in the Windows world can use Prism to setup something similar to what you are doing with Fluid.

gordonmeyer's picture

Re: Re: Getting Sandy in my Face

Thanks for pointing out Prism, Austin!

a11en's picture

Re: Getting Sandy in my Face

Leopard Only- it just quits when started in Tiger. :)

Durango's picture

Sandy and OmniFocus

Do you use both Sandy and OmniFocus and if so, how do you integrate the two?

gordonmeyer's picture

Re: Sandy and OmniFocus

Sorry, Durango, maybe someone else can chime in on this question. I don’t use OmniFocus.

tgillin's picture

Another nice feature of twitter enabled apps...

Another nice feature of twitter enabled applications like SANDY is that you can access them from your smartphone / cell phone using the cell phone’s data circuit.

Most of the native mobile phone support in applications like SANDY is US only. This doesn’t help non-American or travelling American users much. There is a free smartphone service called FRING, from FRING.COM, that allows users with smartphones to access TWITTER from their cell phones via the cell phone’s data services, not text messaging. Users can thus access SANDY via TWITTER via FRING.

Fring displays your cell phone and Skype contacts, along with Twitter, in a common contact list.

I do some blogging for fring and I’ve written some stuff on this topic here and here

sciamachy's picture

YinYang icon?

What’s the app with the Yin-Yang icon above Sandy in the pic? I’ve never seen it before & I’m intrigued.

gordonmeyer's picture

Good eye, grasshopper

That’s “iFortune.” It’s a nifty Cocoa wrapper around the BSD fortune program. See http://sourceforge.net/projects/ifortune/

About gordonmeyer

gordonmeyer's picture

Bio

Gordon Meyer is a Chicago-based author of dozens of software manuals, an expert in “do it yourself” home automation (he wrote Smart Home Hacks for O’Reilly Media), and an experienced public speaker. His interests include conjuring, sociology, and humanizing technology.

 
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Inbox Zero

The original 43 Folders series looking at the skills, tools, and attitude needed to empty your email inbox — and then keep it that way. Don’t miss the free video of Merlin’s Inbox Zero presentation.

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3-part series on attention management for artists and makers. Read Bad Correspondence, The Job You Think You Have, and One Clear Line.