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	<title>International Mac Podcast &#187; Overlong Posts</title>
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	<itunes:summary>Mac News and Views From Around the World</itunes:summary>
	<itunes:author>International Mac Podcast Team</itunes:author>
	<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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		<itunes:name>International Mac Podcast Team</itunes:name>
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	<copyright>International Mac Podcast &#xA9; 2008-2010</copyright>
	<itunes:subtitle>Mac News and Views From Around the World</itunes:subtitle>
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		<title>International Mac Podcast &#187; Overlong Posts</title>
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		<item>
		<title>The Hit List: Basics and Beyond</title>
		<link>http://impodcast.tv/2009/04/13/hit-list-basics-and-beyond/</link>
		<comments>http://impodcast.tv/2009/04/13/hit-list-basics-and-beyond/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Apr 2009 02:24:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Will</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Overlong Posts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gtd]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[guide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Hit List]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[thl]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://impodcast.tv/?p=961</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Because so many people got The Hit List as part of MacHeist, I&#8217;ll do a special series of posts on it. This was supposed to be one long post, but got over 5000 words. If you want to read the entire thing in all its glory, you can do so here. We now return you [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" title="The Hit List" src="http://impodcast.tv/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/hitlist.png" alt="" width="175" height="175" /><br />
Because so many people got <a href="http://potionfactory.com/thehitlist/">The Hit List</a> as part of <a href="http://www.macheist.com/">MacHeist</a>, I&#8217;ll do a special series of posts on it. This was supposed to be one long post, but got over 5000 words. If you want to read the entire thing in all its glory, you can do so here. We now return you to your regularly scheduled post.</p>
<p>The Hit List. Not the most impressive of names, but quickly becoming a force to be reckoned with in the world of simple to-do lists almost through full-on project management. The simple design of the application, basically a computerized notebook pad, allows you to use it in nearly any way possible. A task can be as simple or as complex as needed.</p>
<p>For the purpose of this article, technical terms relating to THL are in <strong>bold</strong>.</p>
<h2>Anatomy of a <strong>task</strong></h2>
<p><strong>Tasks</strong> are the main unit of any GTD application. Standard things <strong>tasks</strong> can have include a <strong>title</strong>, <strong>date</strong>, <strong>tags</strong>, and <strong>notes</strong>. Here&#8217;s what a <strong>task</strong> in The Hit List can have.</p>
<p><a href="http://emberapp.com/users/beiju/image/anatomy-of-a-thl-task"><img title="Anatomy of a Task." src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/anatomy-of-a-thl-task/sizes/m.png" border="0" alt="" width="500" align="middle" /></a><br />
<strong>Tasks</strong> can have any or all of these, although only a title is required.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Title</strong>–The description of what you need to do, as if you were to write it down on a paper to-do list.</li>
<li><strong>List</strong>–A task can either reside in a <strong>list</strong> or the <strong>Inbox</strong> (covered later).</li>
<li><strong>Subtask(s)</strong>–If there are more than one <a href="http://impodcast.tv/2009/01/25/gtd-essentials-actions/">actionable items</a> required to complete a given <strong>task</strong>, it can be given subtasks. (The reason you&#8217;d want to do this, in a nutshell, is so you don&#8217;t have to think about anything when you sit down to work.)</li>
<li><strong>Priority</strong>–How important it is that this task be finished. In THL, higher <strong>priorities</strong> are more important. Useful for seeing which <strong>task</strong> to complete first if they&#8217;re all due Today.</li>
<li><strong>Tags</strong>–Do I really have to explain these? <strong>Tags</strong> are keywords you can apply to a <strong>task</strong> which you can <strong>sort</strong> or <strong>search</strong> by later. To add a <strong>tag</strong>, type a / either when the <strong>task</strong> is selected or when you’re editing the <strong>title</strong>. Then, as you type a list of suggested <strong>tags</strong> will appear, and you can either press return to accept the first one, keep typing to narrow it down or finish adding a new <strong>tag</strong>, or arrow down to the <strong>tag</strong> you want to add. To add a multiword <strong>tag</strong>, add another / at the end. (Instead of <em>/The Hit List</em>, use <em>/The Hit List/</em>.)</li>
<li><strong>Contexts</strong>–Similar to <strong>tags</strong>, but rather than being used for organization they are used to note what resources are needed to complete a <strong>task</strong>, usually like @Mac or @Phone. To add a multiword <strong>context</strong>, use <em>/@The Hit List/</em>, as a <strong>context</strong> is just a <strong>tag</strong> preceded by<em> @</em> (Thanks to Andy Kim, the developer, for pointing it out, and John for reminding me to update the post). As you can see, there is a <strong>context</strong> field in the <strong>Information panel</strong>, indicating that the developer meant <strong>tasks</strong> to have one <strong>context</strong> only, however more can be added. The major advantage to these is that via the <strong>Search bar</strong> (again covered later), you can see what tasks you have the resources to do at the moment.</li>
<li><strong>Start date</strong> and <strong>Due date</strong>. These are independent of each other, and can have both, one, or neither set. The input field will take dates in human-readable formats. T expands to Today, Tom to tomorrow, 2d sets the date in two days, abbreviations for weekdays and months work, and even dates like &#8220;oct3 10&#8243; correctly expand to &#8220;October 3, 2010&#8243;. You can also set the date by clicking on the day on the calendar that pops up when you click into one of these fields. See <a href="http://impodcast.tv/2009/03/21/gtd-essentials-do-and-due-dates/">my post</a> for the difference between the two dates.</li>
<li><strong>Estimated Time</strong>–One of the more interesting features of THL is the ability to track times. You can plan how long you think a <strong>task</strong> will take, and then time it using the built-in <strong>Timer</strong>. This field in the <strong>Information panel</strong> also shows what percentage of your <strong>estimated time</strong> you have been working on the <strong>task</strong>. You can edit it by typing it in, or using a lovely slider that pops up.
<p><a href="http://emberapp.com/beiju/image/thl-timer"><img title="The Hit List timer." src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-timer/sizes/m.png" alt="" width="440" /></a></li>
<li><strong>Actual Time</strong>–One of the few fields in THL you cannot edit, although so many feature requests have been made for it that this may change. The <strong>actual time</strong> shows how long you have been timing the <strong>task</strong>. Not one of the more often used features, but nice to have for some. It is important to note that THL counts eight hours as one day.</li>
<li><strong>Completed</strong>–A task in THL can either be <strong>not completed</strong>, meaning you haven&#8217;t done it, <strong>completed</strong>, meaning you have done it, or <strong>canceled</strong>, meaning you&#8217;ve decided not to do it.</li>
<li><strong>Added</strong> and <strong>Modified</strong> dates–Similar to these properites for files in the Finder, this keeps track of when you added and last modified the <strong>task</strong>. Simple, but useful if you want to set up a Processed <strong>smart folder</strong> (covered later).</li>
<li><strong>Repeating</strong> (not shown)–<strong>Tasks</strong> can repeat at almost any given interval. The <strong>Repeating date</strong> is set using natural language, and you can then customize further whether you want a new <strong>task</strong> to show up only when you&#8217;ve checked off the last one, set how long after the <strong>tasks</strong> are created they become <strong>due</strong>, and have the <strong>repeat</strong> end after a certain number of times or after a date.</li>
</ul>
<p>Quite a full-featured application, as you can already see. However, we&#8217;re still not done with <strong>tasks</strong>. There are several states a <strong>task</strong> can be in, even discounting <strong>Not Completed</strong>. These stages are denoted by changes in the checkbox icon, or the weight of the text in the case of <strong>Today</strong>.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Today</strong>–A <strong>task</strong> with a <strong>start date</strong> or <strong>due date</strong> set to Today or earlier shows up in the <strong>Today list</strong> (covered later), and has the <strong>title</strong> and <strong>tags</strong> show up in bold print. These <strong>tasks</strong> are supposed to be worked on ASAP.</li>
<li><strong>Overdue</strong>–<strong>Tasks</strong> with a <strong>due date</strong> that is before today are overdue, and get a small yellow triangular warning sign in place of their <strong>checkbox</strong> icon. When you mouse over the icon, it changes back to the <strong>checkbox</strong> so you can mark it as <strong>completed</strong>.
<p><img src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-overdue-checkbox/sizes/m.png" alt="THL overdue checkbox" width="222" height="27" /></li>
<li><strong>Timing</strong>–When a <strong>task</strong> is being timed with the <strong>timer</strong>, the icon changes to a small stopwatch. Again, it reverts to a checkbox on mouseover.
<p><img src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-timing-checkbox/sizes/m.png" alt="THL Timing checkbox" width="201" height="26" /></li>
<li><strong>Completed</strong>–As you would expect, when a <strong>task</strong> is <strong>completed</strong> it has a check in the box. The <strong>title</strong> is also slightly greyed out.
<p><img src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-completed-checkbox/sizes/m.png" alt="THL Completed checkbox" width="196" height="27" /></li>
<li><strong>Archived</strong>–When a <strong>task</strong> is <strong>archived</strong> (which we&#8217;ll get to later), the <strong>checkbox</strong> and the <strong>title</strong> are greyed out.
<p><img src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-archived-checkbox/sizes/m.png" alt="THL Archived checkbox" width="192" height="27" /></li>
</ul>
<h2>Containers</h2>
<p>There are two types of true containers in THL, and several other pseudo-containers. The difference is that items actually reside in containers, and are just shown in pseudo-containers. Think of containers like folders in the file system, and pseudo-containers like smart folders. Note that these terms aren’t actually used in THL to the best of my knowledge, I just made them up to allow you to better understand their uses.</p>
<p>The first kind of real container is a simple <strong>List</strong>. <strong>Lists</strong> contain <strong>tasks</strong>. These are ordered sequentially, and can be rearranged. (You can also choose to arrange <strong>lists</strong> by other criteria, which will be addressed later, but they remember their manual sort order when you return to that view.)</p>
<p><strong>Folders</strong>, which are the next container, can only contain <strong>lists</strong> and <strong>smart folders</strong> (which we will address next), as well as other <strong>folders</strong>. They are used to organize your lists. I’ll get into what all these can be used for later. Additionally, if you view a folder you have an option to choose how many tasks from the lists it contains. It does not show the tasks in the smart folders, which is a design choice I believe the developer may be rethinking, or those in lists inside subfolders, which I’m pretty sure is a bug.</p>
<p><strong>Smart Folders</strong> are a lot like <strong>lists</strong>, except for their behavior in <strong>folders</strong>, but cannot be sorted manually. They contain <strong>tasks</strong> automatically selected based on criteria you define. Because you can add sub-rules, <strong>smart folders</strong> can become quite complex. Criteria include every property of a <strong>task</strong>, including its <strong>list</strong>/<strong>folder</strong>, <strong>sub-task</strong> number, and created/modified dates.<br />
<img src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/the-hit-list-smart-folder/sizes/m.png" alt="The Hit List Smart Folder" width="500" height="498" /></p>
<p style="font-size: 85%;"><strong>Smart Folders</strong> can be as complex as this, or as simple as &#8220;Tag is @Mac&#8221;.</p>
<p><strong>Tags</strong> and <strong>Contexts</strong>–At the top of the <strong>sidebar</strong>, next to the text &#8220;Lists&#8221;, are a pair of icons. The folder shows your <strong>lists</strong>, and the tag icon shows your (what else?) <strong>tags</strong>.</p>
<p><img src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-sidebar-title/sizes/m.png" alt="THL Sidebar title" width="203" height="24" /></p>
<p>Now seems as good a time as any to describe <strong>tags</strong> to a fuller extent. They are designed to be used to narrow down the list of <strong>tasks</strong> you can work on at any given moment. If you are at work, and use THL for more than just your work <strong>tasks</strong>, you can use the <strong>Filter bar</strong> (again covered later) to narrow down the list of <strong>tasks</strong> you see to only ones <strong>tagged</strong> with <em>/Work</em>,  for example. If the creative juices are flowing, you can narrow down to <em>/Writing</em> <strong>tasks</strong>, or <em>/Blogging</em> ones. Unfortunately, you can&#8217;t do both of the latter on the fly, as the <strong>Filter bar</strong> shows <strong>tasks</strong> with both <strong>tags</strong> if more than one is selected. You can create a temporary <strong>smart folder</strong> though.</p>
<p><strong>Contexts</strong> are, as <a href="http://impodcast.tv/2009/03/08/gtd-essentials-contexts/">has been explained before</a>, tags that denote what you need to have in order to do the task, like <em>@Mac</em>, <em>@Phone</em>, or <em>@Errands</em>. You can narrow down your list of <strong>tasks</strong> by what <strong>contexts</strong> you are in at that moment. If you frequently are either at work, home, or the library, you can set up <strong>Smart Folders</strong> for places you frequent and then view them when you are ready to Do. You can also just view all the <strong>tasks</strong> in <em>@Errands</em> if you&#8217;re planning a large shopping trip.</p>
<p><strong>Tag</strong> structure can again be as complex as you make it. The three types in this pane are <strong>tags</strong>, <strong>contexts</strong>, and <strong>bundles</strong>.</p>
<p><img src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-tag-structure/sizes/m.png" alt="THL Tag structure" width="217" height="553" /></p>
<p>Because <strong>tags</strong> are sorted alphanumerically, <strong>contexts</strong> naturally come to the top, unless you use other symbols preceding your <strong>tags</strong>. Their icon is a light pink color, to match their highlighting color, and <strong>tags&#8217;</strong> are yellow.</p>
<p><strong>Bundles</strong> are a new concept, unless they&#8217;re present in OmniFocus. They are the equivalent of folders for your <strong>tags</strong>. You can add <strong>tags</strong> and <strong>contexts</strong> to a <strong>bundle</strong>, but not assign it to a <strong>task</strong>. It can, however, be a criterion in a <strong>smart folder</strong>. <strong>Bundles</strong> can be used for organizing different types of <strong>tags</strong>, such as those for activities and those for areas of responsibility. I wish <strong>bundles</strong> could be assigned to <strong>tags</strong>, because in Things I had a <strong>tag</strong> for <em>@Mac</em>, with subtags for <em>@Internet</em>, <em>@Blogging</em>, <em>@Scripting</em>, and so forth. Then I could simply <strong>filter</strong> by <em>@Mac</em> in the <strong>filter bar</strong> and see all of them, or just see some. This may come in a future release, but I&#8217;m not holding my breath.</p>
<h2>Special Containers</h2>
<p>THL comes with some containers you can&#8217;t delete. These are nicely split up into containers and pseudo-containers by their headings.</p>
<p>The <strong>Inbox</strong>, under the heading Inbox, is the default <strong>list</strong> for every new <strong>task</strong> added either by the <strong>Quick Entry panel</strong>, dragging to the THL dock icon, or using the item THL puts in the Application &gt; Services menu. (Quick tip: Using this and the Services Menu Module, you can add <strong>tasks</strong> to THL from Quicksilver, even if THL is closed.) Again, this is a <strong>List</strong>, so it is a container. This is also where <strong>tasks</strong> go if their <strong>list</strong> is deleted.</p>
<p>Under the Hit Lists heading, there are two pseudo-containers. The <strong>Today</strong> view is where you go when you are ready to Do.</p>
<p><img src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-today-view/sizes/m.png" alt="THL Today view" width="500" /></p>
<p>This is split up into about six or seven categories, and organized in the order THL thinks you should complete them. First off are your <strong>overdue tasks</strong>, which shouldn&#8217;t be so hard to figure out. Then are <strong>tasks</strong> that have the <strong>due date</strong> of Today. After this I remember a section for Due in the Next 3 Days, but this issue (I think of it as an issue because that&#8217;s not the way I work) may have been changed in one of the two recent updates. Still Working On refers to <strong>tasks</strong> added to <strong>Today</strong>, either by moving them to the <strong>list</strong> or their <strong>start date</strong> passing, before today, that don&#8217;t fall into an above category. Start Today <strong>tasks</strong> have been added to the <strong>list</strong> today or have a <strong>start date</strong> of today, and the rest categorizes the <strong>tasks</strong> you have <strong>completed</strong>. If you&#8217;re astute you will notice that the <strong>task</strong> under &#8220;Completed today&#8221; is merely marked as <strong>completed</strong>, while the one under &#8220;Completed yesterday&#8221; has been <strong>archived</strong>. Of course, if there are no <strong>tasks</strong> to fit a category it disappears.</p>
<p><strong>Upcoming</strong> looks like <strong>Today</strong>, but displays different categories.</p>
<p><img src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-upcoming-view/sizes/m.png" alt="THL Upcoming view" width="500" /></p>
<p><strong>Tasks</strong> with a <strong>start date</strong> in the future are shown in the <strong>Upcoming list</strong>. The increments are Tomorrow, Next 3 days, Next 7 days, possibly Next 14 days, Next 30 days, and so on.</p>
<h2>Working with GTD</h2>
<h3>Collection</h3>
<p>There are several ways to input <strong>tasks</strong> into THL. The most prevalent is simply to hit the return key in almost any THL view. If you have no <strong>task</strong> selected, it will appear at the end of the <strong>list</strong> you&#8217;re viewing, and if you have one selected it will appear right under it. It also keeps the level of indentation, so if you have a <strong>subtask</strong> selected it will add a sibling to that child. To add a <strong>subtask</strong> of the <strong>task</strong> you have selected, either hit tab before typing the <strong>title</strong> of the <strong>subtask</strong> or hold the shift key while you&#8217;re pressing return.</p>
<p>Any <strong>task</strong> you add while viewing anything other than the <strong>Inbox</strong> inherit the properties of whatever you&#8217;re viewing. The <strong>Today</strong> view is one exception—<strong>tasks</strong> there act as if they were added in the <strong>Inbox</strong>. However, <strong>tasks</strong> in a <strong>list</strong> go into that <strong>list</strong>, while viewing a <strong>tag</strong> or <strong>context</strong> they inherit that, and when you&#8217;re <strong>filtering</strong> the new <strong>tasks</strong> gets the filtered <strong>tags</strong>. You cannot, however, add a new <strong>task</strong> while inside a <strong>Smart folder</strong>, and can only add <strong>tasks</strong> inside a <strong>folder</strong> if you have a <strong>task</strong> selected, so THL knows which <strong>list</strong> to put it in.</p>
<p><img src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-quick-entry-panel/sizes/m.png" alt="THL Quick Entry Panel" width="500" /></p>
<p>The <strong>Quick Entry panel</strong> works almost a bit of the <strong>Inbox</strong> torn off and floating at you, but not quite. To activate it, use the key combination you can set in the Shortcuts tab of the Preferences. Entering a <strong>task</strong> here works the same as anywhere else, except the Return key dismisses the window and sends your <strong>task</strong> to the selected <strong>list</strong>, and the f key to <strong>file</strong> the <strong>task</strong> doesn&#8217;t work. To add a <strong>subtask</strong>, use shift-return, and to add another <strong>task</strong> use command-return. ^-0 through ^-9 sets <strong>priority</strong>, and as always command-&#8217; lets you edit the <strong>note</strong>. To see these handy shortcuts, click the ? button in the corner. You can also choose which <strong>list</strong> to add the <strong>task(s)</strong> to, although you have to use the mouse and not the keyboard for this. It&#8217;s important to remember that this stays set even after you dismiss and recall the <strong>Quick Entry panel</strong>, so unless you want your next entry to disappear into your filing system, it&#8217;s helpful to bring the panel back up to set the <strong>list</strong> to <strong>Inbox</strong> again.</p>
<p>Another way of adding a <strong>task</strong> is to drag anything onto THL&#8217;s icon. If it is text, that becomes the <strong>task</strong> <strong>title</strong>. For a link, the <strong>title</strong> is set to &#8220;Look at&#8221; and the URL, and the clickable link is put into the <strong>Notes</strong> field. For files, it places a link to them in the <strong>notes</strong> field, and shows an attachment icon when the <strong>notes</strong> are collapsed and the file icon when they are expanded. The <strong>title</strong> of the <strong>task</strong> is set to &#8220;Look at&#8221; and the name of the file.</p>
<h3>Processing</h3>
<p>Once all your tasks are in the <strong>Inbox</strong>, THL makes it really easy to add everything you need to them using keyboard shortcuts. Rather than list them all here, I&#8217;ll point you to the <a href="http://groups.google.com/group/the-hit-list-users/web/keyboard-shortcuts">user-made list</a> on Google Groups that&#8217;s infinitely more likely to be updated along with the application. Some of my most-used are <strong>command-1 through command-4</strong>, <strong>space</strong>, <strong>tab</strong>, <strong>X</strong>, <strong>T</strong>, <strong>B</strong>, <strong>F</strong>, <strong>G</strong>, <strong>/</strong>, and <strong>@</strong>.</p>
<p>To add <strong>due dates</strong> and <strong>start dates</strong>, as has been said before, is a matter of Select &gt; Tab &gt; Tab &gt; Type <strong>start date</strong> in natural language &gt; Type <strong>due date</strong> in natural language. The one shortcut I have heard requested is one for cycling through <strong>lists</strong>, rather than going directly to one using <strong>G</strong>.</p>
<h3>Doing</h3>
<p>THL has a very neat view we haven&#8217;t even touched on yet. It&#8217;s called <strong>Card View</strong>, and sounds like what it is.</p>
<p><img src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-card-view/sizes/m.png" alt="THL Card view" width="500" /></p>
<p>To show the <strong>card view</strong>, either click its icon above the <strong>notepad</strong> or use keyboard shortcut command-2. In <strong>card view</strong>, all sensible keyboard shortcuts still work, and you can edit <strong>notes</strong> more easily. This could be useful for outlining or writing small things like an email, so you don&#8217;t have to go hunting for it when you want to keep working on something you&#8217;ve left off. You can also drag links and files into the <strong>notes</strong> field here. This is useful for just doing what you need to do, because you can concentrate on it instead of seeing all your other <strong>tasks</strong> around it. Once you check off your <strong>task</strong>, it is moved to the back of the pile, with the same nice animation the arrow buttons or keys show, and you can focus on the next thing. (If you want to you can turn the animation off in the General section of the Preferences.)</p>
<p>One more thing you should try is dragging a <strong>task</strong> from this view. Grab a bit of the <strong>card</strong> above the <strong>title</strong>, and begin a drag. You&#8217;ll likely never use this, but it&#8217;s so nicely put together it&#8217;s worth seeing.</p>
<p>Once you Do (and check off) your tasks, you can <strong>archive</strong> them with the button at the left of the <strong>Hints bar</strong> (covered later), or with the <strong>`</strong> key, right above tab. To see your <strong>archived tasks</strong>, click the Show <strong>archived</strong> checkbox on the top left of the <strong>notepad</strong> (or <strong>card</strong>, although it doesn&#8217;t do much of note in <strong>card view</strong>).</p>
<p>This seems as good a time as any to mention a large easter egg in the app. &#8216;Tis the season, as well. Create a <strong>task</strong> with the word &#8220;Mario&#8221; in it, <strong>complete</strong> it, and <strong>archive</strong> it. Do the same with &#8220;Star wars&#8221;. Now you&#8217;ll see why those are the only two <strong>tasks</strong> allowed to stay in the <strong>archive</strong> of my <strong>Inbox</strong>, for those times I need a motivator and don&#8217;t have any chocolate around. Speaking of which, excuse me for a second…</p>
<p>All right, I&#8217;m back. That is some good chocolate. Now on to the final stage of GTD.</p>
<h3>Reviewing</h3>
<p>There&#8217;s not much an application can add to the reviewing process. The only thing I can say for THL is that there is a Date Modified criterion for <strong>smart folders</strong>, which could be used to see what <strong>tasks</strong> need to be reviewed.</p>
<h2><strong>Tabs</strong></h2>
<p>Look at the top of your THL window. Most likely, if you&#8217;re reading this, you have one <strong>tab</strong>-shaped thing sticking out of the top of your <strong>notepad area</strong>. THL supports <strong>tabs</strong>, just like your web browser (hopefully) does. Double click in an empty area of the <strong>tab bar</strong> or press command-T to create a new one. As you can see, the colors vary through <strong>Lists</strong> including <strong>Inbox</strong> (white), <strong>Today</strong> (green), <strong>Smart lists</strong> including <strong>Upcoming</strong> and <strong>Tags</strong>/<strong>Contexts</strong> (purple), and <strong>Folders</strong> (blue). You can choose in Preferences &gt; Shortcuts to have command-W or command-shift-W close a <strong>tab</strong> (the opposite closes the whole window).</p>
<p>My <strong>tab</strong> structure is organized in order of what should be cleared first.</p>
<p><img src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-tabs/sizes/m.png" alt="THL Tab Structure" width="500" /></p>
<p>As you can see, first I move everything out of my <strong>Inbox</strong>, then work on the items in <strong>Today</strong> (which normally fills all my time). If I finish that I move on to <strong>Upcoming</strong>, and on the unlikely event I finish that I go in order of Pending (<strong>smart folder</strong> for everything I can work on at the moment, then my Someday list (which is different from Eventually), and finally a <strong>smart folder</strong> for absolutely everything that&#8217;s not <strong>completed</strong>.</p>
<h2>The Three <strong>Bars</strong></h2>
<p>As you can see, there are three buttons across the bottom of the <strong>notepad area</strong>. (If you haven&#8217;t noticed, I&#8217;m using that to refer to the area your <strong>tasks</strong> are displayed in, which looks like a notebook.) The first works a bit differently than the others. This is what is called up by the <strong>G</strong> key. You can type letters, and THL will show you <strong>lists</strong>, <strong>folders</strong>, and <strong>smart folders</strong> you have that contain those letters in that order, no matter what letters may be in between them. You can then use the arrow keys to move between matches, and enter/return to to to that <strong>list</strong>.</p>
<p><img alt="THL Go To" src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-go-to-bar/sizes/m.png" width="500" /></p>
<p>It should be noted that while this works in a similar way to the <strong>file</strong> (<strong>F</strong>) command, it won&#8217;t create a new <strong>list</strong> if you type something that doesn&#8217;t match any <strong>list</strong>/<strong>folder</strong>/<strong>smart folder</strong>.</p>
<p>The second <strong>Bar</strong> is the <strong>Hints bar</strong>, and it&#8217;s useful to keep open for new users. It gives you easy buttons to press to do the things you&#8217;d normally use keyboard shortcuts for if you could remember them, while teaching you the shortcuts. There&#8217;s also a <strong>search field</strong>, which only searches the current container and doesn&#8217;t search <strong>notes</strong>. This is also where the <strong>Archive button</strong>, which I referred to earlier, is located.</p>
<p><img alt="THL Hints bar" src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-hints-bar/sizes/m.png" width="500" /></p>
<p>The final <strong>Bar</strong> is the oft-mentioned <strong>Filter bar</strong>. It shows you all your <strong>tags</strong> and <strong>contexts</strong> applied to <strong>tasks</strong> in the current container, and if you click one the <strong>filter</strong> turns on and only <strong>tasks</strong> with that <strong>tag</strong> are shown. If you select more than one, using command or Shift, only <strong>tasks</strong> with both are shown. To click on <strong>tags</strong> that are hidden, click the double arrow next to the <strong>search field</strong>. This and the <strong>Archive button</strong> are the same as in the <strong>Hints bar</strong>.</p>
<p><img alt="THL Filter bar" src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-filter-bar/sizes/m.png" width="500" /></p>
<p>I say the <strong>Go To bar</strong> is different because it appears to come up in front of the other two, while they just switch. Also, it&#8217;s white.</p>
<h2>Sorting</h2>
<p>To see the <strong>sort</strong> options for THL, either go to View &gt; Sort By or right-click the colored strip between the <strong>notepad area</strong> and the <strong>tab area</strong>. <strong>Manual sort</strong> is replaced by <strong>Today</strong> in the <strong>Today list</strong>, and you can&#8217;t sort by <strong>list</strong> inside a <strong>list</strong>, but otherwise they&#8217;re all the same even if some are greyed out. They&#8217;re pretty self-explanatory, although you may find you need to mentally add the word &#8220;Date&#8221; after <strong>Added</strong>, <strong>Completed</strong>, <strong>Due</strong>, <strong>Modified</strong>, and <strong>Start</strong>.</p>
<h2>Sequential vs Parallel <strong>tasks</strong></h2>
<p>So far, we can organize our <strong>tasks</strong> by <strong>list</strong> or by <strong>tag</strong>, so how do we know which one to use? My personal system is to have a <strong>list</strong> for everything that happens sequentially and a <strong>tag</strong> for that which doesn&#8217;t need to. That way I can use <strong>Smart Folders</strong> to replicate the <strong>lists</strong> made out of <strong>tags</strong>. This is my current system as it stands today.</p>
<p><img alt="My THL Folder structure" src="http://emberapp.com/beiju/images/thl-folders/sizes/m.png" /></p>
<p>And on that note. I&#8217;ll finish up this mammoth of a post. I have out done myself, this totaled about 3905 words. I hope you all liked it, and will stay tuned for more along these lines.</p>
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