Hi Christopher, Christopher Allan Webber wrote: > Eric Abrahamsen writes: >> Russell Adams <rlad...@adamsinfoserv.com> writes: >> >>> My experience has been that after watching me manage a project in Org >>> for a few weeks, I have customers beg me to help them install it on >>> their PC. I've had quite a few converts through working together and >>> by example. >> >> Perhaps the web incarnations of org could help here too. Say the manager >> of a small group project were able to create a web-version of an agenda, >> and project members could filter that by clicking on javascript-enabled >> versions of tags corresponding to their TODOs, and even click the TODOs >> to change state, that could be a nice introduction to project management >> in Org. It might require too much org functionality to be re-written in >> javascript though? Dunno. > > I think a web application that allowed for > orgmode-as-a-group-todo-management-system thing would be huge. It would > require a lot of thinking of how to approach it in a way that would be > nice and make sense. I'm not really sure what it would look like. But > hook that up to git and you'd have a really interesting bug tracking > system.
I guess it should be in the spirit of configurable organizers like the TiddlyWiki based GTD systems (see http://www.tiddlywiki.com/): - MPTW (MonkeyPirateTiddlyWiki) :: http://mptw.tiddlyspot.com/ - mGSD :: http://mgsd.tiddlyspot.com/demo3.html and http://thinkcreatesolve.biz/mGSDEnhancements.html - D-cubed - tbGTD :: http://tbgtd.tiddlyspot.com/ That is the killer brother application for Org, for sure. > There was that relevant GSoC project, but I'd be interested in this > happening in python or similar. Now that we have the standard for > orgmode as a file format... Best regards, Seb -- Sebastien Vauban