For me, to-do lists are far too limiting. Trello strikes the right balance, however, when it comes to customizability.
Gitit personal wiki for technical information (my blog post: <http://nathantypanski.com/blog/2014-07-09-personal-wiki.html...).
Google Calendar has my schedule, including where I am at any time during the day. It syncs with my phone, laptop, and tablet. While I would prefer something plaintext (like Org-Mode offers) the Android compatibility is not as good.
Google Tasks (integrated with calendar) and Google Keep for on-the-go notes and tasks.
Paper notes in two-column Cornell style in bound notebooks <http://www.reddit.com/r/GradSchool/comments/27l7tx/whats_you....
I access the files with a fluid interactive interface and full text search provided by Notational Velocity / nvALT (http://brettterpstra.com/projects/nvalt/), for when I'm in a graphical environment, or my own NV-inspired shell script(https://github.com/lfam/n) for when I'm in a console. My primitive script has Bash and Zsh completion and gets out of my way pretty well... could be improved a lot, though.
I use Syncthing (http://syncthing.net/) to sync this directory between my devices. Syncthing is a FOSS decentralized file sync program that works on Linux, OS X, Windows, FreeBSD, and Solaris. Plus there is a work in progress Android app. I recommend it highly if you are looking for a FOSS alternative to Dropbox or BitTorrent Sync. It works right now which is saying a lot compared to its competitors, and it is truly decentralized (no server / client architecture like Seafile).
If anyone here is an Android developer, they could use your help, especially with the filesystem.
I've been meaning to explore org-mode. Maybe next time I take a long plane ride.
I can not recommend Outlook Tasks enough. I'd used Outlook for years never giving this more than a cursory glance. A few months back our entire office was placed on an outlook training course. I went in thinking this would be a waste of a day, yes a whole day on Outlook! It was worth it and I came out a convert for some functionality i'd not explored properly, tasks being one. You have to spend the time to restructure the layouts (best thing is open task view next to the calendar and default to this view not email) and build categories. Then have the discipline to put things in tasks (Ctrl-shift-k). If in a team you can allocate them task too. The latter is great for me as I tend to pass on jobs, assume they will be done and then forget about them til I need it. This helps track these smaller easily forgotten tasks well. I'd really recommend giving it a go.
With OneNote, this is quite powerful but you have to take the time to structure & set it up. But once done it is super efficient to store loads of notes.
I realised I sound like a bit of a MS fan-boy, but I have tried loads of the usual suggestions and found these 2 products work really well together. But like most MS products it take a little learning/effort to get the benefit.
- Apps such as Wonderlist, Clear...
- Entries in my GMail Calender
- Notes App on my Phone
- Post-it notes
- Writing reminder emails to myself
At the end of the day, nothing really worked for me. What DID work for me: a Whiteboard on my front door.
I have all my project ideas, to-do lists and appointments on there.
I just save things in Evernote. Physical documents get scanned and uploaded. I also use BitTorrent Sync for things like music and videos. Extremely sensitive stuff like banking documents are encrypted and synced as well. I don't upload that stuff.
- Sticky notes: Yes, a small sticky notes is enough. I write down all my to-do list _at that day_ in that small sticky notes. If my todos do not fit on single sticky note paper, i must write it on another paper (for another day).
- A small book: B5/A5 size is good. It is very effective when i am unable to pick up my phone (e.g.: in commuter). I write most of my ideas there.
- Google Keep (within my Phone): Seriously, i have tried Evernote, Springpad, etc, and nothing suits my usecase. I don't need categories, tags, etc. What i need is stream, because i don't care my old notes. I don't care about reminder a month ago to buy a juice for my mom. I only care about newer notes.
I've been working on Catalist to solve this exact issue and that too, for teams. The premise is that by having your checklists, pipelines, and notes all in one place you can actually have full context of what you need to do. It also makes it easy to take a shot at visualizing productivity through additional signals like time tracking, general activity, and more.
Sign up for a free trial (http://www.catalist.me)
Some people try to use one tool (for example Evernote) for everything, but in my opinion there are benefits to separate ideas, writings, sketches from tasks that need to be done.
I've got multiple wikis for different projects I work on. I keep the wikis in a Dropbox folder to sync them across devices.
Since I use markdown for my Vimwiki files, I can edit them fairly easily - I use Editorial on iOS when I'm away from a computer.
Keep it all in text, avoid vendor lock in. My workflow is timeless and needs to outlast the latest trend.
I just throw everything in there and color code it. been using it for a year or so