Hi, I just watched the excellent video at http://www.thesecretweapon.org/ and learned two huge missing features in Omnifocus by watching how they use Evernote to implement GTD.
1) Tags -- with a tag-based system, you can have multiple contexts assigned to each action. You can also have other arbitrary filters.
2) "Due soon," "Due later", etc. Most people have items that fit into these categories. You don't necessary need to start them today, you don't know how a given day might go, but you do want to do them soon. By forcing me to choose a date and time, OF makes me constantly "procrastinate" items. It's extra work. I want to be able to set a due date that if not finished, just moves itself back automatically. Because honestly, I don't have many things that are really due at any time.
So the takeaway is that OF suffers from the delusion that it is the only Right Way. It could use some flexibility in the areas of categorization and time.
I have many to-dos and am thinking of migrating to Evernote to try the tagging system.
1) Tags -- with a tag-based system, you can have multiple contexts assigned to each action. You can also have other arbitrary filters.
2) "Due soon," "Due later", etc. Most people have items that fit into these categories. You don't necessary need to start them today, you don't know how a given day might go, but you do want to do them soon. By forcing me to choose a date and time, OF makes me constantly "procrastinate" items. It's extra work. I want to be able to set a due date that if not finished, just moves itself back automatically. Because honestly, I don't have many things that are really due at any time.
So the takeaway is that OF suffers from the delusion that it is the only Right Way. It could use some flexibility in the areas of categorization and time.
I have many to-dos and am thinking of migrating to Evernote to try the tagging system.