Re: [IxDA Discuss] Representations of Group Calendars/Time Events

2008-09-08 Thread Jeremy Yuille
i stand corrected - check out dopplr's timeline view .. works best when you're looking at a fellow traveler's timeline, so you can compare against your timeline and see overlaps. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Posted from the new ixda.org

Re: [IxDA Discuss] Representations of Group Calendars/Time Events

2008-09-08 Thread carrie
Perhaps I am way off base here... ...but what about looking for inspiration in the language of sheet music? There are representations for individual notes, their duration, and each instrument in the orchestra has its own music...the conductor has the master with all of the instruments and can see

[IxDA Discuss] Representations of Group Calendars/Time Events

2008-09-07 Thread Joe Sokohl
Hi all, I'm working on a new way to represent calendaring/even scheduling. it seems that almost all representations of calendars time, be it a daily or weekly view, show time vertically and days or groups horizontally. A few tools represent it the other way (think Outlook Calendar

Re: [IxDA Discuss] Representations of Group Calendars/Time Events

2008-09-07 Thread Livia Labate
say a department schedule in an academic setting. Are there smart ways to represent time and events that are better than what conventions indicate? I assume you are asking about presentation. I like the time tunel model: Etsy Time Machine http://www.etsy.com/time_machine.php Apple Time

Re: [IxDA Discuss] Representations of Group Calendars/Time Events

2008-09-07 Thread Jeremy Yuille
not really a smarter representation, but time manager international http://www.tmiworld.com/ make a range of printed planners etc. I've always loved their year planner booklet because it lets you see a month to a page and plan down to the hour. its schema is similar to the outlook example you