The Bog of Lost Scholars

29 August 2009

Craft Update: Lots of Finishing

Filed under: Crafts — Castiron @ 18:35

Finished (photos to come):

  • Ivy socks.
  • Sampler Towel #2. (It’s amazing how much better weaving goes when the warp actually goes over the back beam.)
  • Sampler Towel #3. (It’s also amazing how much faster it goes.)
  • Blueberry Grape socks.
  • Aikman-Smith Dragon Ornament.

Started:

  • Toy Brontosaurus. Body is done; head is on hold while I debate whether to embroider eyes now or do it after it’s done (I think I’ll wait). After that, it’s just the legs and sewing.
  • Sampler Towel #4. A third done, and when I get another couple hours with the loom I should be able to finish it.

Progressing:

  • Socks from Regia Ringel Color in Clown: a few more rows.
  • Medallion Travel Bag: 2/3 through the bottom.
  • Annemor #8 Gloves: Thumb gusset started on first glove.
  • Andean Treasure Vest: Didn’t stop the neck decreases where I should’ve; debating whether to rip.
  • Ballet socks: Halfway up the legs.
  • Arietta: A few more rows. (The third ribbing color is in.)
  • Heere Be Dragone: a couple more rows
  • Memories afghan: A few more rows.
  • Coupling: A few more rows.
  • Spot-check socks: Still on the beginning ribbing, but on both socks.

18 August 2009

On Three Task Management Programs

Filed under: Dejunking and Organizing — Castiron @ 13:31

Over the past ten years, I’ve used three different programs to manage my to-do list.

The first, Life Balance, is still a program I love. It runs on the Mac, Palm, PC, and now iPhone. I like its basic idea of sorting your tasks by giving higher priority to tasks in areas you’ve been neglecting; I enjoy the interface and find it fun to work with. It’s great for projects that have subtasks, both ones that need doing in order and ones that can be done in any sequence.

So, why don’t I use it anymore? Because my Palm died, and this made the program far less useful to me. Even before that, because I used it both at home and at work, it was a hassle to keep it synced; once my Palm was no longer there as a go-between, it became too much trouble. (If I’d had a good thumb drive at the time, I might have tried keeping the file on that, but at the time it wasn’t an option.)

Enter cloud computing. Through someone’s blog, I discovered Remember the Milk, an online to-do list. I was immediately hooked. While I missed many of the LB features, the convenience of having my task list at work AND home, hassle-free, outweighed the missing capabilities. And RtM has many handy features of its own, most notably its use of tags and its easy keystrokes for editing tasks. I used RtM for well over a year, and was planning to finally pony up for a paid account even though it wouldn’t give me any new features that were useful to me….

…until one of RtM’s quirks bit me in the rear.

I don’t know if this is still true, but at the time, when you selected multiple tasks in RtM, you had to invoke the multi-edit function to change details about all the tasks, but you didn’t have to invoke it to delete them all — or complete them all. And when you created tasks, they stayed selected until you unselected them. This made it easy to accidentally delete or complete a task, especially when one of the selected tasks was so low on the screen that you had to scroll down to see it.

It was an accidental completion that got me. One day my boss asked me about my progress on a project that I hadn’t started and that had completely slipped off my radar. While fortunately I was able to complete the project in time, I wondered how it could’ve escaped my notice since I was regularly reviewing my work tasks in RtM; on investigation, it turned out to have been accidentally completed when I completed another task, so it never showed up on my to-do list afterward.

I’d had several accidental deletes and completes before that I’d caught and been able to undo, but after this one, I no longer trusted RtM. The whole point of using a to-do list, whether on paper or in pixels, is because my brain can’t keep track of all my tasks and obligations; if it’s too easy to lose a task on my to-do list, then it’s a bad to-do list for me. (Granted, there’s an RtM workaround: always unselect all before selecting tasks to complete or delete. But by that point, I wasn’t comfortable with trusting the system during the time it’d take me to ingrain the habit.)

So I searched for a replacement program, and eventually decided to try Toodledo, the program I’m still using.

Toodledo has most of the features I liked about RtM — the cloud, the tags, the convenience. It was easy to import my RtM data (though I did have to do some data wrangling with my exported file to keep from having too much cruft), and while it took me a few days to get used to the different interface, one day I realized that I’d been using Toodledo happily for a few months and wasn’t having any “but I wish I could do this RtM thing” thoughts. Plus, I can do a few things that I can’t do in RtM (most notably, have the equivalent of an RtM smartlist for “overdue tasks that were due within the last week”). There’s a few things about the program I’m not crazy about (I don’t like the checkmark when you hover over the task checkbox being the same color as the checkmark when you’ve completed the task, for example), but overall I’m satisfied — enough so that I’ve paid for a Pro account.

To someone who’s looking for a good to-do list program, I’d recommend checking out any of these three. Life Balance is a fine program; I’d recommend it to a business who wants a to-do program that lives on their own servers, to a Palm user, or to an iPhone user. In the event that I ever shell out for an iPhone (or get myself an iTouch, if it runs on that too), I might start using it again. RtM, in spite of the quirks has many features a lot of folks find indispensable, and if you start out with the “unselect all” habit, it’ll work fine for you. And of course, Toodledo does what I need from a to-do list: shows me what I need to do, when I need to do it, with lots of fun features.

(Now, if only a to-do list could actually do some of these tasks for me….)

16 August 2009

Recent Reading: Romances

Filed under: The Castiron Reading Journal — Castiron @ 13:32

Pamela Morsi, Simple Jess. A romance where the hero is mildly mentally retarded. The story is great; it’s interesting to see how Althea’s and Jesse’s love develops. Jesse’s frequent frustration with everyone talking too fast also rings true, based on what I observe of my own son. The details of life in Marrying Stone are also nifty.

One thing that particularly struck me about this story: if you set it today, it’d be harder to make it work. Jesse has cognitive impairments, most definitely, but he’s been able to learn how to hunt, to care for livestock, to butcher meat, to do various farming tasks. He’s perfectly able to carry out the jobs of an adult in his society, something Althea realizes as the story progresses. Today, on the other hand, unless Jesse had been lucky enough to be born on a family farm that was staying afloat or to a family that practiced homesteading in the Rockies, he wouldn’t be able to support a family, and possibly wouldn’t even be allowed to marry.

Loretta Chase, Don’t Tempt Me. I love the characters and the premise, and I overall enjoyed the book, but the last quarter of the book felt a little tacked-on; the villain didn’t really work for me.

1 August 2009

Craft Update: Bags, Cross-stitch, and Little Knitting Bits

Filed under: Crafts — Castiron @ 00:27

I finally proved that one can make Leslie’s Old-Fashioned String Bag in a day; I made two more of them this month, the lilac one taking just a smidge over a day and the blue one finished in less than eight hours. (Both bags were mostly crocheted while at the theater finally seeing Star Trek [liked it so much, I went twice]. Once you’re past the bottom, this bag is actually a pretty good project for working in the dark, and because crochet only uses one hook, it doesn’t make noise like knitting needles do.)

hempathy-bags

I’ve had Jennifer Aikman-Smith’s Christmyth ornament patterns sitting in my cross-stitch pattern folder for years. Since I signed up for an ornament-finishing class in August, that’s given me the incentive to finally work on one of these for the class, the dragon ornament. I’m about 15% through it (and wishing that I could put my cross-stitch into Ravelry so I could have all my needlework on one list).

Other progress:

  • Socks from Regia Ringel Color in Clown: half the foot.
  • Medallion Travel Bag: halfway through the bottom.
  • “Shall We Dance?” doily: six rounds. If I crocheted properly, it’d be further along; my weird self-taught crochet motions are pretty slow, and I’m not going to use a thread project to teach myself a different method.
  • Annemor #8 Gloves: Cuff done on first glove.
  • Andean Treasure Vest: on fifth pattern after the armhole steeks.
  • Oblique: Two decreases done on back; chugging along.
  • Ballet socks: Gussets done; working on the legs.
  • Ivy socks: I keep messing up one particular row of the repeat and having to rip back. That said, there’s a half repeat left on one and a whole repeat left on the other, plus ribbing. I may finally get these done in August.
  • Arietta: A couple more rows. I’ve at least finally added the second color, but there’s still less than an inch done on this.
  • Blueberry Grape socks: Heels done; working up the legs.
  • Heere Be Dragone: a couple more rows
  • Memories afghan: A few more rows.
  • Coupling: A few more rows.
  • Spot-check socks: Still on the beginning ribbing.
  • Aran sweater: A few more rows on the sleeves; I need to do about two more repeats of one pattern for them to be long enough.
  • Flutter Cardigan: A few more rows. I’ve decided to keep working it at the current size and see what happens.

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