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Hyper Cortex: Why Does My Brain Mac Osteoporosis
This late 2012 series allows memory changes, two hard drives, quad core i7 hyper threaded CPU which is really an 8 core. Of Mac OS Sierra which was a. 31 Full PDFs related to this paper. Pharmacoterapy Casebook. Where does StarCraft II save screenshots in Mac OS X? Is why you don't see the tearing artifacts you generally do in Windows when working with video. I have just launched a new product. First some back story. A few years ago, my wife and I were renovating the house we live in now. Trying to schedule and track all the different tasks, tradesmen. The Hyper-V virtual switch is the first step to getting your VM on the network, here's all you need to know about planning and operating virtual switches.
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I have just launched a new product. First some back story. A few years ago, my wife and I were renovating the house we live in now. Trying to schedule and track all the different tasks, tradesmen and quotes was a real pain. We stuck Post-it® notes onto a whiteboard to try to keep on top of it all. The Post-it notes represented the various jobs that need doing. We placed them in columns (representing what stage they were at: needs quote, accepted quote, scheduled, doing, done) and rows (representing the various trades: plumbing, roofing, electrical etc). It worked, but it was far from ideal:
- I wanted to see status vs trade, status vs room and room vs trade. But changing the layout was a pain, so I had to pick one layout and stick with it.
- Colours were useful for extra information. But we were limited to just the few colours that Post-it notes come in.
- There was only limited space to write on the note.
- My wife couldn't read my handwriting.
- We had to use a separate spreadsheet to track the budget.
- Post-it notes would fall off and get lost after being moved a few times.
- I ran out of Post-it notes.
That is when the idea of Hyper Plan first occurred to me. It has been burning a hole in my brain for the last 5 years. Now I have finally got around to implementing it.
Hyper Plan is Post-it note style planning, implemented in software. In software you are no-longer limited by the number of Post-it notes you can afford, the amount of wall space you have or the number of colours Post-it notes come in. You can even change the layout and colours with a mouse click. All with animation and easing curve loveliness.
The sorts of planning you can use it for include:
- project planning
- planning what is going into your next software release
- event planning
- Kanban / Scrum / Agile
- planning a holiday
- to do list (I know!)
Anything where you have discrete tasks that you want to be able to categorize (e.g. by person, status or type), schedule or track in a visual form.
Here is a 2:42 minute overview in video form (with audio):
Can't see the video? Try this mp4 version (10.7 MB).
Hyper Plan is quite different to anything else I have seen. That could be a good thing or bad thing. I am putting out an early beta to try to find out.
Hyper Plan is not currently for sale. I don't want to take the time to set up all the payment processing and licensing until I am confident someone might actually buy it. The current beta version will run completely unrestricted until 17-Jan-2015. There are Windows and Mac versions. Hopefully a commercial version will be available for sale by the time the beta expires. If not, I will release another free version.
Currently it is very much an MVP (minimum viable product).
- The UI is a bit rough around the edges.
- The logo was done in 5 minutes in Word.
- The documentation is just a quick start guide.
- Some important features are not implemented yet (e.g. printing, exporting and undo).
But I have tried to follow my own advice and resist foul urges to spend months polishing it (which is hard!). What is there is pretty robust though, and I think it demonstrates the concepts. Hopefully I will know in a few weeks whether it is worth taking the time to polish it to commercial levels.
I would love to know what you think. Particularly how useful you find it for ‘real' planning tasks. Even responses of the form 'I wouldn't use this because…' are helpful. Please also email a link to anyone else you think might be interested. Particularly if you have ever seen them sticking Post-it notes to a wall or swearing at Microsoft Project! My contact details are here.
FAQ
Q: Why is it desktop, rather than SaaS/mobile?
A. I think stories of the death of desktop software are exaggerated. Also:
Hyper Cortex: Why Does My Brain Mac Oscars
- I can build a minimum viable product much quicker for desktop.
- Differentiation. Some people prefer desktop apps, e.g. because they don't have reliable Internet or don't want to store their data on third party servers.
- Less competition. Everyone else seems to be doing SaaS/mobile.
I might add SaaS and/or mobile versions later, if there is enough demand. Note that DropBox (or the Google, Microsoft or Apple equivalents) allow you to easily sync a Hyper Plan file across multiple computers.
Q: So it's Trello for desktop?
A. Not really. I had the basic idea before I ever saw Trello. And I'm not stupid enough to compete with a free tool from the great Joel Spolsky! Trello is great at what it does. But Hyper Plan is different in quite a few ways. In Trello the emphasis is on collaboration and workflow. In Hyper Plan the emphasis is on visualization and planning. Hyper Plan allows you to present your information in lots of different ways with a few mouse clicks. It also has a built in ‘pivot table' type feature that is much easier to use than Excel pivot tables. This is really useful for totalling effort and expenditure by different categories.
Post-it is a registered trademark of 3M.
Hyper Cortex: Why Does My Brain Mac Osmosis
The scrum photo is licensed under creative common by Logan Ingalls.