Archive - Miscellaneous RSS Feed

Task Management Software

I am looking for a piece of task-management software with a few specific bells and whistles, but (because I am overwhelmingly busy) don’t have a ton of time to vet the 1,000 products that come up in a search for “task management software”. So I am hoping someone may be able to recommend something based on my needs.

I want some software that allows me to create a list of tasks or to-do’s and is/does the following:

  • Web based
  • Allows me to set due dates
  • Allows me to set reminders to be sent based on due dates
  • Supports attachments to tasks
  • Has a simple interface and UI
  • Has a mobile app version (totally optional)

I know some of this can be done with Outlook/Google Calendar, but is there any good third party software out there that accomplishes this?

2010 In (about) 12 (or so) Words

A few months ago I was at a bar with some friends, and we started going around the group, trying to describe the past years of our lives using one word for each year. For a variety of reasons, this was terribly difficult. Aside from trying to remember what the central theme of your life was in say 2005, it’s not easy to distill the entire year down into one word. However, as I think back to 2010, I think I can get close to describing each month of this past year in one word…or two. Or a few.

Out of all 32.5 years of my life, 2010 was maybe the most unexpected, tumultuous, insane, transformative years of my life. Here is how I remember it.

  • January: Comfortable, then blindsided.
  • February: Chaos. Scrambling.
  • March: Starting over.
  • April:Introspective, not retrospective.
  • May: Intense focus. Betterment.
  • June: Soccer. Lots of soccer.
  • July: Back out there.
  • August: Restless. More change needed.
  • September: Vacation month. (Greece!)
  • October: Back to work (Beer!)
  • November: The new normal.
  • December: Ready for what’s next.

The last year has taught me that there is no way to predict what the next could possibly hold. But if it’s even half as interesting as 2010 was, it’s going to be a hell of a year.

Let’s Have A Coffee

I had the pleasure of meeting up with Matt over at CustomMade this morning for a coffee and chat about our respective companies, the internet, and randomly related things. On my way out, I was reminded how much I love doing this sort of thing; meeting and connecting with interesting people and just sharing ideas and thoughts on all sorts of things.

As such, I want to do this more frequently, and am thinking of trying to do a one-on-one coffee with someone new, every week. It doesn’t much matter who you are or what your background is (though online/product/marketing/digital/advertising types are preferred), but mainly that you are interesting and passionate about whatever it is you do.

So if you are up for grabbing a coffee (Espresso Royale on Newbury Street is my go-to spot), get in touch.

Changing The Dating Game

Think about online dating for a second. Even if you’ve never done it, you probably know a little about how it works. You create a profile (the bait), and you basically start fishing. Most sites make you pay a subscription fee, and some don’t.

It’s all pretty simple, and it hasn’t changed in 15 years. More or less zero innovation in this space, save for a few nutty angles on the whole thing.

Over the past few months, I’d been thinking about how online dating could be made better. Or at least more interesting. And here is where my mind was going.

  • Online dating is pretty socially acceptable these days, but there are still a lot of people that have some trepidation about the whole thing. So how do you get around the social stigma that holds people back from getting into online dating?
  • I also thought about all of my female friends, who aren’t single, but who LOVE playing matchmaker and setting people up. How could you get those people involved? If you could get not just the single people, but ALL people involved (in the broaden-your-potential-market sense), the size and scale here gets a lot more interesting.
  • And in the offline world, the best way to meet someone, is to be introduced through a mutual friend. Someone that can vouch for both parties and clear that transaction so to speak. How could that trusted offline experience be re-created online?
  • Which led me to think about an online dating site, that was more of a “game” than a dating site in the traditional sense.
  • How could you introduce game mechanics whereby matchERS could be rewarded for successfully connecting matchEES?
  • And by making it a game, where the single people (or matchEES) were passive users that were being matched up by other users, rather than actively fishing, it seemed to take a little of the social sting out of the whole process.

ANYWAYS…

Today I stumbled upon an ad for “The Matching Game“. The ad simply showed me two pictures and asked me to click to vote if I thought these two people should date. Out of curiosity, I clicked through, and was instantly thrown into a very simple, very slick little voting interface that allowed me to vote on who I thought would or would not be a good match.

And after I voted on the requisite number of couples, my results were displayed, along with an indication of how well I had done in predicting compatibility.

The Matching Game

I love this concept, and I am glad to see someone was thinking similarly about this.

Page 5 of 45« First...«34567»102030...Last »