I've at various times used two tools which might be a basis for this. They were both started over 20 years ago, so their patebt rights should have lapsed: the idea of such rights is to protect start-ups, rather thab to give ab eterbal mobopoly. The first, I don't recall its name or designer, however it's at least 30 years old, the second is so ancient I'm fairly certain it cannot be claimed. The core is the use of journals as a diary scheduler. The first and simplest idea is a bar line on the lower margin showing elapsed time, with markers linking to journals. A future journal is your life scheduler, a past journal is the diary. Three Up-Down-Sideways buttons on the right end of the bar (ie the bar itself lives in a box) give future, access today's journal, past, and a menu button on the LHS or top gives everything else .<br> The second idea is to somewhat adapt all the manual small paper diary systems (no names, no pack drill) to TW, so what are now simply Tiddlers and Journals expand to include People to contact, Activities, Goals, each of these also a Tag, <br> These have become so uniquitous that although certain operations might wish to protect their coding ideas, they still have to challenge the oldest I know of, Rudyard Kiplings "Serving Men" as a master model, which rather subverts their claims to copyright. and patent. Another planning model I learned nearly 5 years ago is the military Orders template, Ground-Situation-Mission-Execution-Administration/Logistics-Command structure-Questions, and a third is a memory aid, "Men-Money-Materials-Machines-Methods-Motivation", as template structures.
On Tuesday, 3 October 2006 19:10:10 UTC+1, grough wrote: > > I have an idea for a TiddlyWiki macro/plugin that I desperately need, > http://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/poems_serving.htm > but I'm not an experienced JavaScript or macro developer. I'm > wondering if anybody here can point me to something that exists > already, or steer me in the right direction. The idea is for a very > simple time management tool - something that tells you what you're > supposed to be doing right now until some time later. > > Here's a usage scenario that will clarify its purpose: > > It's 6:15PM, and I have my personalized TiddlyWiki open in my browser > ready to do some work. I look at the header section of my wiki and I > see a message... > > Work on website design until 8PM - open notes > > I click "open notes" and my WebDesignIdeas tiddler opens up. I look > at my notes, work on the site for a couple of hours, taking more notes > as I go. Now it's 8:05PM, and I notice the message has changed. It > says... > > Put together MP3 mix for Meg until 9:30PM - open notes > > I click "open notes" and my TunesForMeg tiddler opens up. So you > get the idea... It's just a time management tool that tells you what > you're supposed to be doing at the present time. > > I'm not sure how the actual task list would be implemented as a > tiddler. Something like: > > [Work on website design] 6PM 8PM WebDesignIdeas > [Put together MP3 mix for buddy] 8PM 9:30PM TunesForMeg > > So that when you call <<currentTask>> at a certain time, the correct > task (if one exists) is rendered in its place. I suspect somebody has > already built a TiddlyWiki task system that could be used instead of > reinventing the wheel. > > I imagine the DatePlugin (http://www.tiddlytools.com/#DatePlugin) would > be helpful somehow. As for the rest of the guts of the macro/plugin, > I'm a little mystified. > > If anyone has any ideas or can point me in the right direction, I would > be very grateful. > > Gavin > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWiki" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to tiddlywiki+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To post to this group, send email to tiddlywiki@googlegroups.com. Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/tiddlywiki. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/901b2749-0039-4061-b1db-aaa83da57fc7%40googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.