Sorry Nozbe (GTD Software Review)

I’ve been using Nozbe to manage my ToDo’s for about a year. It’s a good system, web-based, has an iPhone app that synchronizes pretty seamlessly, and has some powerful importing capabilities. It works, but for some reason I don’t love it. My subscription runs out in December, and I’m going to switch.

RelaxingOnBike

For background:

  • I try my best to implement GTD.
  • I lead an eight person marketing team in a company of about 50 people.
  • The marketing team uses Basecamp for large, multi-person projects.
  • I have been using Nozbe for personal projects and work projects that don’t involve others.
  • I use a PC at work, and until last week a PC at home. Now I use a Mac at home.

Nozbe is exclusively web-based. There’s nothing more convenient and cross-platform than keeping everything up in the cloud. You don’t have to worry about synchronizing data among computers. And, you can access your data from any machine–including ones that aren’t yours. That’s good. The downsides are that it’s slower than a desktop application and the development of some really powerful features is hampered by the web interface. Suggestion: Take a lesson from Evernote, and let me have the choice to use the cloud or the desktop.

Nozbe has a free iPhone app. The Nozbe iPhone app is very good, and it’s free. Thank you for not asking users to pay for an iPhone app on top of paying for the basic service.

The “+ New Action” button isn’t always visible. I find that when I’m adding lots of actions, moving actions between projects, and assigning contexts, the button disappears and I have to reload the page to get it back. In any ToDo program, the most important feature is to be able to add new action items anytime. Suggestion: Create a Facebook-like toolbar at the top or bottom of the page with key commands on it. You’ve got it on your iPhone app. Do the same thing on the site itself.

Nozbe supports multiple contexts. Nozbe contexts work like tags, and are pretty effective. The catch is that the number of projects and contexts you can use depends on the plan you purchase, and to really implement GTD, I find that I need to tag my stuff in lots of different ways. The limits aren’t too bad, because I can always purchase a bigger plan.

What’s most frustrating about contexts, however is editing them. Let’s say I have an action assigned to three contexts, and I want to delete two of them. I have to open the action for editing, delete one context, confirm my choice, then I have to open the action for editing again, delete the other context and confirm my choice again. My personal style is to be fairly liberal with tags as I enter items, and to clean them up once a week-during my weekly review. The way this works makes that process pretty frustrating. Suggestion: Let me delete and edit all the contexts and click save changes only once.

Nozbe has a powerful, flexible importing mechanism that is difficult to remember. Nozbe has developed a very powerful system for importing tasks from many different sources. You can upload a file, send an email, and even tweet your new action items and projects to Nozbe. The problem is that it requires that remember a fairly complex syntax to do all this. It’s powerful, but I can never remember all the rules. Suggestion: Send me back a confirmation when I add items letting me what you did with them, so I can fix it if I made a mistake. If I have to go to website to make sure I did it right, the importing feature looses it’s utility.

On the off chance that Michael (the Nozbe guy) reads this, I hope you find these comments and suggestions constructive.

Right now, I’m searching for a new system, and have been checking out

What do you use to keep yourself organized?

Shuffling off to Buffalo and Pittsburgh

Every two years, the style of Karate that I study holds an international tournament. This year, the Isshin-ryu World Karate Association Championdship Tournament was held in Pittsburgh, PA on June 18 – 20, 2009. Eight people from the the Isshin-ryu School of Karate (where I study) attended. Instead of driving out with the group on Thursday, I decided to take a few days off work, and turn it into a week-long motorcycle trip. I hadn’t been on a long trip in a few years, and a week on the bike sounded like a great idea. Even better, I could visit some family and friends along the way.

The plan was to start out on the afternoon of Saturday, 6/13 from Hackettstown, NJ, and take a leisurely ride up to Middlesex, NY to visit my brother, who lives near Canandaigua lake. Then, head up to Hamburg, NY to spend some time with Sensei Mike Downs at the Defensive Arts Dojo. After that, take a few days to ride around the forests of Northern, PA before arriving in Pittsburgh on Thursday. The tournament ended on Saturday, so I’d just ride straight home on Sunday. Fortunately, I was able to stick mostly to the plan, but Mother Nature had a few surprises in store.

Surprise #1: On the afternoon I had planned to start, it was raining. Not just a little rain, either, and it was getting dark. So, instead of a nice, leisurely ride to my brother’s with a hotel stop along the way, I was going to have to make it there as fast as I could. So, I left around 8am and rode straight through ’till 2pm. Fortunately, it was a beautiful day, and a really nice ride. We spent the afternoon Kayaking on Canandaigua lake, and grilled some ribs for dinner. Good to see my brother, sister-in-law and nephew. The next morning, I gave Brandon a ride to school on my Harley, which was fun for both of us.

Day 2 (Monday) was another gorgeous day for riding. I went South through Naples, and West through Dansville to Nunda. There’s a big hill between those two towns, and twenty years ago Eric and I rode that hill on our bicycles. It was the most grueling hill climb I’ve ever done that took us about 4 hours to go up, and about 15 minutes to ride down the other side. I hit 55 MPH on my bicycle (which is a pretty dumb thing to do while loaded down with 3 days of camping gear). On the motorcycle, that killer hill only took about 20 minutes. The rest of the day consisted of a ride through Letchworth State Park and a straight shot over to Hamburg for Karate class. The Defensive Arts folks are a great group of people that I’ve become friends with over the years. Thanks to Sensei Mike and everyone there for their hospitality (and to Racer, Wilson and the cats for allowing me to stay in their guestroom.)

Day 3 (Tuesday) started out nicely–down to the forest areas of Northern, PA. Through Ellicotville, Olean, Shinglehouse and Coudersport on my way to Wellsboro. I pulled in to a motel in Wellsboro. I was planning to drop off my stuff, and head over to Pine Creek Gorge (AKA the Grand Canyon of Pennsyvania), but surprise #2 was waiting for me in the parking lot in the form of a roofing nail in my back tire. Unfortunately, that tire only had 300 miles on it. Fortunately, it didn’t go flat while I was riding. A call to the Harley Owners’ Group got a flatbed towtruck to arrive after about 90 minutes, and they took me over to Cox’s Northern Tier Harley-Davidson, who got me a new tire and back on the road in about 3 hours. So much for the PA Grand Canyon today. Dinner at the local steak place was good. I needed a break.

Day 4 (Wednesday) brought surprises #3 and #4–a full day of rain, followed by tornado warnings near Pittsburgh. It started out as a drizzle on my way to Pine Creek Gorge, which was still nice. I’ll have to go back there for a real visit sometime. The plan was to ride through the Allegheny National Forest along several scenic roads, then find a hotel. The going was slow. The roads were slick. The visibility was poor. But, I did have to get to Pittsburgh by Thursday, so I had to make some progress today. I finally got near Clarion, PA, found a hotel and stopped for the night. Bought dry socks at the local Walmart, and headed to the laundromat to wash and, more importantly, dry all my clothes. I spent the evening eating takeout chinese food, and watching the storm–tornado warnings, lightning strikes and all. Thanks to the woman at the Hampton Inn that let me park my bike next to the building, under good cover for the night.

Day 5 (Thursday) was a short day, just down to Pittsburgh from Clarion. It took about 90 minutes, through some nice rolling hills. Getting close to Pittsburgh, traffic got a little hairy, but it was still just a short. Quick ride. Surprise #5, rained for the last 30 minutes, and I had to pull over on the highway to put my raingear on again. By that time, I was numb to it.

Day 6 and 7 (Friday and Saturday) were spent at the Karate Tournament. Separate post to come later.

Day 8 (Sunday) was a really long day from Pittsburgh back home. Started off nice enough, but about 90 minutes outside of Pittsburgh, the rains came again. No surprise this time, just a long, 6 hour ride back in the rain on boring highways. Unpleasant, but uneventful. The rain letup about Allentown, but Surprise #6 was actually the swarm of bees I rode through there. Fortunately, between the windshield, the helmet, the faceshield, the leather and the raingear, there was no getting stung, but the bike and I took on the nice yellow sheen of bee guts. The drivers in the cars on either side of me just shook their heads and laughed, sympathetically, I hope.

Through all that I still managed to have a good time, but I wouldn’t describe it as the relaxing vacation I had hoped it would be. Maybe next time.

Time Out NY Challenge: 100 Best Things we Ate in 2008

We had dinner with some friends last night, and they told us about Time Out NY Magazine’s list of the 100 best things they ate this past year. Since they publish a list, it seemed like a good goal would be to try to hit all their favorites from last year during this year.

Dinner was at Apiary, which was excellent. I had a pork loin with shaved Brussels sprouts and glazed Tokyo turnips. It was cooked perfectly and wasn’t too sweet. Donette had a black bass, that was very good as well. We’d absolutely go again.

After dinner, we decided to start working on the list, so we headed over to try the Bacon peanut brittle at Redhead, 349 E 13th St between First and Second Aves (212-533-6212). $5. It was a great balance of salty, sweet and just a little spicy. It was hard to stop eating. We recomend you give it a try, and be sure tell us what you think.

Somehow, I managed to get invited to an event at LeCirque this week, so I’ll have to try the cherry religieuse which is described as “a double-decker éclair filled with cherry custard,” sounds good.

Have you tried anything on the list? Let me know.