June 03, 2009

Use Hiveminder on your iPhone with iMinder!

A while back, we released a web services API for Hiveminder.  The Hiveminder API powers todo.pl as well as a host of other small tools.

Kris Arnold, a Hiveminder user and  software developer has created iMinder, a nifty (and free) Hiveminder client for the iPhone and iPod Touch.

If you're an iPhone or iPod Touch user, you can download iMinder 1.0.1 the App Store. Built on the Hiveminder API, iMinder lets you access your tasks using an intuitive iPhone interface and transparently keeps your iPhone in sync with Hiveminder. (It does a bunch of other cool stuff too.) 

When you start up iMinder, you'll see something like this:

Main screen


iMinder lets you make changes to a task via your phone:
Quick changes

Read more at iMinder's website, or follow iMinder development on Twitter.

Thanks, Kris!

(More screenshots after the cut)

Continue reading "Use Hiveminder on your iPhone with iMinder!" »

August 13, 2008

Hiveminder is waiting for your call

One of my favorite things about Hiveminder is the number and variety of systems it can talk to. Since we launched, we've wanted a way for you to be able to talk to Hiveminder.

We've just integrated Jott.com with Hiveminder. Jott is the "missing link" service that lets you dictate notes from your mobile phone. You can send email, add items to your calendar, and now you can put items on your Hiveminder todo list.

Wherever you are, whatever you're doing, Hiveminder is now just a phone call away:

  1. Call 1-866-JOTT-123
  2. Say "Hiveminder"
  3. Then say your task. "Take out the garbage tomorrow"

Jott will transcribe your note, send it along to Hiveminder, and we'll create the task for you. You'll be able to listen to a recording of your note, so you don't need to worry about hard to understand words.

If you want, you can give all Jott tasks from your office phone the [work] tag. Just link your Jott account to a specific Hiveminder tasks by email address to automatically set tags, due dates and everything else we support in those [square brackets].

Setting up Hiveminder to work with Jott only takes a moment. Try it out today.

June 16, 2008

Time tracking (beta) with Hiveminder

Today we're releasing time tracking as a new Hiveminder Pro beta feature.  (If you read to the end of this post, you can save a few bucks when you sign up for Pro.)

Time tracking in Hiveminder lets you estimate the time left for a task and record when and how long you work on it.  These numbers are useful as a measure of completion and for tracking billable hours.  Once you've started using time tracking, Hiveminder can generate reports that show how well you track time.

Handy stopwatches for each task make it easy to keep track of your time as you work.

Screenshot of the stopwatch for time tracking

Reports per task and for any tasklist provide a way to see how much time is left and who has worked on the task.

Screenshot of time tracking reports

Learn more about how to use time tracking in our online help.

Time tracking is a new feature for us that hasn't seen a lot of usage yet, so we're not sure how it'll work for everyone.  (This is why we're calling it a beta feature.)  We'll be improving and refining it as time goes on and we use it more, but we also want your feedback.  As always, we're very open to all comments and suggestions for improvement.  Let us know using the feedback box on every page what parts of time tracking work for you and what parts don't.

If you decide to sign up for Hiveminder Pro to try out this beta feature in the next month, use the coupon TIMETRACKINGBETA to get 10$ off!

March 03, 2008

Hiveminder in your email client

I'm really excited. I mean, I'm excited every time we launch a new Hiveminder feature, but this one has been the "Killer App" for me ever since I started playing with the first test versions a few months ago.

We've made it a priority to make Hiveminder easy to access, no matter where you are or what you're doing. That's why you can already get at Hiveminder from your web browser, mobile browser, iCal, Atom and plain text feeds, Google Calendar, iGoogle, AOL Instant Messenger, Jabber, unix command-line, TwitterSMS (through Twitter), with.hm, published addresses, Quicksilver, or through our Web API (including just-released support for OAuth).

Today, we're releasing Hiveminder for your email client.  (It's a Pro feature. If you read to the end of this blog post, you can save a few bucks when you sign up for Pro.)

First-class email client support

Imap_demo_inbox

To use Hiveminder in your email client, it needs to support IMAP and SSL or TLS. Thankfully, that's just about every email client out there these days. Here at Best Practical, we've been using Mail.app on the mac and iPhone, Thunderbird and Evolution on Linux, Profimail on Series 60, Claws-Mail and Modest on the cute little Nokia internet tablets and even bit the bullet and tested things out with Outlook Express on Windows XP. Beta users have been using everything from Outlook to "OfflineIMAP", a unixy tool to sync your email to a bunch of text files on disk.

Once you set it up, all the tasks on your Todo list show up in a new Inbox in your email client.  Hiveminder will create email folders for each of your groups and show your tasks broken down by who's responsible for them, too. It's that easy.

You get all the details

Imap_demo_msg

Every task shows up like a mail message. Inside, you'll find everything Hiveminder's tracking about the task. Due date, summary, tags, even the task's full history - it's all there!

Whenever you go online, Hiveminder will automatically update each and every task in your inbox.

Update tasks from your mail client

Imap_demo_mom_tomorrow

Hiveminder's IMAP interface is designed with "magic" folders to let you manage your tasks. Just drag a task from your Inbox  to "Completed" and Hiveminder will take care of the update. Out of the box, there are also folders for common operations like "take this task" and "hide this task for...."  Moving a message from your email Inbox to your Hiveminder Inbox will create a task for you. Dragging a task to a group does what you'd expect.

(Of course, you can still use your email client's "Reply function to add a comment to a task.  Hiveminder sets every task's return address so replies get routed to the right place.)

Full offline access

The protocol we use to get Hiveminder into your email client (IMAP) is designed to make offline access "just work."  Once you've set up your email client to work with Hiveminder, you can work offline, just like you do with email.  Drag tasks to "Completed", hide tasks away for two weeks or even get to "Inbox Zero" nirvana by dragging tasks into your Hiveminder inbox.  The next time you go online, your client will talk to Hiveminder and synchronize everything.

Free for Hiveminder Pro users

If you're already a Hiveminder Pro user, the new IMAP functionality is a free upgrade. If you're not Pro yet, today is your lucky day.  Actually, any day before March 10th is your lucky day. Just use the coupon IWANTIMAP at https://hiveminder.com/account/upgrade. We'll knock the price down to $24 for your first year. That's just $2 per month for your first year.

To get started with a new Hiveminder account, visit https://hiveminder.com/splash/signup/.

When you're ready to set up Hiveminder for your email client, visit http://hiveminder.com/help/reference/IMAP/Login-options.html

Hiveminder API now supports OAuth

Just a quick heads up that Hiveminder now has support for OAuth.  OAuth is a new way for you to safely share access to your data with third-party services. As an end-user, you can safely stop reading this post now.

If you're an application or service developer and have something that you think might dovetail nicely with Hiveminder, now's a great time to get started. 

The best place to discuss our use of OAuth is http://groups.google.com/group/hiveminder-api

February 14, 2008

Hiveminder Loves You! (And now you can use Twitter and SMS with Hiveminder)

There's nothing romantic about a gift of todo lists. There. We said
it. But we wanted to offer you a little something to show you how
much we love you. For one day only, use the coupon code HIVEMINDERLOVE
to get 25% off of a year of Hiveminder Pro.  Just visit:

    https://hiveminder.com/account/upgrade

But, we're not writing just to tell you how much we love you. We
have another present for you today. We've been spending an awful
lot of time using Twitter to broadcast what we're up to. And we've
spent enough time leaving ourselves memos by Twitter that we decided
it was time to do something.

Today we're launching Hiveminder Integration for Twitter. If you're
eager to get going, you can get started right now by visiting:

   

http://hiveminder.com/prefs/twitter

Using Hiveminder by Twitter works a lot like our IM and Jabber
interfaces with a few important differences to take advantage of
everything Twitter has to offer.

Twitter lets you send private messages using the "d" command; to
address messages straight to Hiveminder, just prefix them with "d
hmtasks". You can use any of the Hiveminder IM commands to work
with your existing tasks.

To create your first task from Twitter, just tweet "d hmtasks call
my mom tonight". Hiveminder will create the task and then tweet you
back with the task id.

If you want to do a bit more, just tweet "d hmtasks help" to find
out how.

One of the coolest things about Twitter is the ability to broadcast
your thoughts and status to all your friends. Now you can add things
to your todo list and let your friends know what you're up to at
the same time. Just include "@hmtasks" somewhere in your tweet and
Hiveminder will take care of the rest. And your friends might just
help pressure you into getting stuff done ;)

I've saved the best for last.  Through Twitter, you can now update
Hiveminder by SMS.  In the US, just text your tweets to 40404.
Outside the US, you'll want to refer to Twitter's SMS help.

January 21, 2008

Hiveminder: Prettier Mobile UI and Faster Task Reviews

I had a bit of time this weekend, since I wasn't busy with client work and most of my friends were off at Arisia or The MIT Mystery Hunt.

I took advantage of the solitude to do some work on task review and the mobile interface.  Review has been far too slow for far too long. It was one of the earliest parts of Hiveminder we implemented and it desperately needed updating. I took the time to rethink the buttons available within the interface as well. We'd love to know if review feels faster to you.

Mobile got more of an overhaul. You can now view task details, edit them and even show full histories.  We've also made mobile prettier and more iPhone friendly.  Try it out and tell us what you think!

January 16, 2008

Hiveminder Pro

Hiveminder Pro launches today

Today, we're releasing Hiveminder Pro, a major update to our online task management system. Here at Best Practical, we're addicted to Hiveminder's slick, simple task tracking and sharing, but that's not too surprising-- we built Hiveminder to be the shared todo list we always wanted. You don't have to take it from us, though. Sarah Linder of the Austin American-Statesman writes:

"I am crazy about Hiveminder. I started using the online to-do list a little more than a year ago, and we're very content together. I had been lost, adrift -- trying different ways to track my stuff, but never settling down. Hiveminder made me less flaky, less absent-minded, less likely to wake up at 3 a.m. realizing I had forgotten something important. Hiveminder, you complete me."

If you've never used Hiveminder, let me take a moment to run through some of what I think are its most interesting features:

Braindump

You've got a lot on your mind. Getting all the stuff you need to do out  of your head and into a trusted tool like Hiveminder can make the difference between a good day and a day struggling to get anything done. With Braindump, you can just type out a list of what you need to do - just like writing it up on paper or in Notepad. Hiveminder will turn your notes into a todo list, looking for email addresses, due dates, categories and hints that something  might be important. There's a braindump box on every page, but you can focus  in on braindump at http://hiveminder.com/braindump

Task Review

If you're like me, you have a few hundred items on your todo list. Some of them are work tasks that I really need to get to today and some are little home repair tasks that I can put off for another few months. Task Review walks you through everything on your todo list one at a time. You get to make some simple decisions about each task: Is it done? Can I do it today? Can I get someone else to do it? How long should I hide it away for? At the end of the review, you're left with a pared down list of things you can get done today. Do a review and declutter your list: http://hiveminder.com/review

History

Just as important as knowing what you do is knowing what you've already done. Hiveminder keeps track of all the changes you make to your tasks, so you can get a full history of an individual task later. That means we can also show you what's happened to your tasks today, yesterday or any day in the past. You can get a peek of what your tasks have been up to today at: http://hiveminder.com/on/today

Sharing

One of the strengths of any web-based application is how easy it becomes to share things. Hiveminder is no exception. We built it from the ground up to make it easy to share one task or thousands. You can easily assign a task to another person just by setting the task's owner field to their email address. Hiveminder will make sure they get email telling them that you need them to do something. They don't even have to be a Hiveminder user. We'll send them a URL which lets them access their task without signing up. Once you have a few more tasks to share or a few people you regularly share tasks with, you can create a group and invite other users to join you. Everybody in the group can see all the group's tasks (though you can control who can edit them), you can assign tasks to individual users and everybody can share a list of what needs doing.

Hiveminder integrates with everything

Whether you're a Googleista using the iGoogle and Google Calendar widgets, a Mac user browsing your todos with our iCal feeds or reading a feed of tasks in Bloglines or Google Reader, your tasks are always at your fingertips. If you live in your IM client, HMTasks is always around to chat with. The friendly little bot can tell you about what you need to do today and take notes when something new comes to mind. Browser search box integration for Firefox and IE7 lets you search Hiveminder and even braindump new tasks, no matter where on the web you are. I haven't even gotten into our commandline tools or Web API, but if that's what you're into, you can find out more at http://hiveminder.com/tools

...and more

I haven't mentioned tags, our innovative "but first...and then" organizational system, printing support, incoming email addresses, the mobile and mini user interfaces or any of a host of other features, but if you visit http://hiveminder.com today, you can find out more about them.

Last February, PC World Magazine ranked Hiveminder as one of the best Todo list apps on the web. Since then, we've been hard at work to make Hiveminder even better:

  • We've improved performance across the board
  • We've added new Google Calendar and iGoogle integrations
  • We've added new AOL IM and Jabber chat interfaces
  • We've significantly improved the API (more on that in the next few weeks)
  • We've added integrations with Firefox and IE7
  • We've cleaned up and streamlined the interface
  • We've made repeating tasks easier to use ...and a whole bunch more

Today, we're launching Hiveminder Pro. It's $30/year (but read on to find out how to save a few bucks.) For your money, you get:

Reports

Pretty charts and graphs are a great motivator and they can provide useful input about how you work. One of the folks here at Best Practical found out that he tends to get more work done on Wednesday than on every other day of the week combined and that his most productive times are when everyone else is out of the office at lunch. Of course, Hiveminder Pro reports are also available for your groups, so you can see who's overloaded, who's slacking off and whether you're getting ahead or falling behind. To turn on graphs and charts, visit https://hiveminder.com/pro

Attachments

Many of you who use Hiveminder to collaborate with team members both inside and outside your organization have told us that you'd really like to use Hiveminder to share documents related to your tasks. The wait is over. As of today, each Pro user has a 500MB task attachment quota. You can work with attachments through the Web UI or simply attach them to tasks you create by email. Attachments you sent in before we created Pro accounts will magically appear when you upgrade at http://hiveminder.com/pro

Saved lists

Hiveminder makes it easy to search and sort your task list. But until today, you needed to redo your searches day after day. Hiveminder Pro gives you a "Save list" link on every task list. It's easy to build a list of all items tagged "shopping" or everything you need to do for your boss. We have a bunch more things you'll be able to do with your saved lists soon, too! To start saving your lists, visit http://hiveminder.com/pro

SSL Security

On today's wider web, protecting your information from prying eyes is increasingly important to many of you. Hiveminder has always protected your password when you log in, but today we've enabled SSL (https) encrypted logins for ALL Hiveminder users. Pro users can choose to protect all their interactions with Hiveminder by visiting https://hiveminder.com to log in. To protect your account with SSL, visit http://hiveminder.com/pro

with.hm

I've saved my favorite for last. Hiveminder has always made it easy for you to create incoming addresses so others can send you tasks by email, but until today it was still hard to assign a task to someone else from your email client. Today, we're introducing a never-before-seen way to talk to an application from any email client.

Once you set up your secret code in your Hiveminder Pro settings, you can send a task to anyone on the planet by appending ".mysecret.with.hm" to their email address. You don't need to do anything to configure your email client.

If I wanted to ask the president to give me a balanced budget, I'd open up my email client and dash off a note like this:

To: president@whitehouse.gov.mysecret.with.hm 
Subject: Balanced budget, please?

It would be great if you could take care of this next week!

Thanks,
Jesse

Hiveminder Pro will make a task and notify the President that I've assigned him a task. If he's an existing Hiveminder user, the task will pop into his todo list. If not, he'll get an email with a URL to view and reply to the task I assigned him. To get started assigning
tasks by email, just visit http://hiveminder.com/pro

It's time to go Pro!

Hiveminder Pro accounts are just $30/year, but since you're a friend of ours (or a friend of a friend), we'd like to offer you (and your friends) an additional $5 discount. Just enter LAUNCHCODE at https://hiveminder.com/account/upgrade. The coupon is good through February first.

If you know someone (or many someones) who could use the gift of productivity, you can use your coupon to give them Hiveminder Pro at https://hiveminder.com/account/gift

In the coming weeks and months, we'll be adding a number of other really cool features to Hiveminder and Hiveminder Pro. We'd love to hear your feature suggestions. Just drop them in the "feedback" box on the left-hand side of every page on the site.

Be Productive,

Jesse, for Hiveminder

November 09, 2007

Hiveminder on Jabber

Many of us are enjoying our IM interface (I sure am!). Unfortunately, it has been AIM only. The most popular request for the IM bot has been "give us Jabber!". Today we've finally convinced HM Tasks to join the Jabbering ranks.

It takes only a few moments to set up your account for IM. On Jabber (and Google Talk) he is HMTasks@jabber.org. On AIM he is HMTasks.

After linking your Hiveminder account with your IM account, start out by sending todo.

We're also still adding new features to IM. If you're not using aliases yet, you're missing out. Aliases let you create your own shortcuts. For example, you can set up an alias h to expand to create [homework] [due tomorrow]. You can then type h read chapter 4 and it will do what you'd expect.

Our newest IM feature is filter. Filters let you focus on what needs to get done. For example, you can filter for "tag @work" and you'll only see tasks tagged with @work. Any new tasks will also get the @work tag. Using filters you can finally work with group tasks sanely on IM -- just filter group Spelling Bee Champions.

Enjoy!

October 26, 2007

Hiveminder in the news

So, we've seen a bit more press and blogger notice of Hiveminder than usual and we're pretty excited:

Hiveminder got written up in the Austin American Statesman.

I found out becase we've been seeing a little bit more in the way of the "what are these tag things?" feedback than is usual and I went Googling.  The writeup itself makes me want to blush.

Is it wrong to love a Web site? To be happy to see it every day? To feel lost without it?

I am crazy about Hiveminder. I started using the online to-do list a little more than a year ago, and we're very content together. I had been lost, adrift — trying different ways to track my stuff, but never settling down. Hiveminder made me less flaky, less absent-minded, less likely to wake up at 3 a.m. realizing I had forgotten something important. Hiveminder, you complete me.

Of course, with great publicity, comes great responsibility. We've been deluged with feedback, lots of it really good. Even the complaints are friendly and helpful. We're working hard to get all the feedback answered and improve our online help based on what we've heard.


Paul Fenwick put together a great slidecast about how he uses Hiveminder to be more productive.

Paul talks about his basic productivity hacking with Hiveminder as well as some of the most advanced poweruser features hidden away in our IM interface. 

Thanks, Paul. This is great stuff.


Zak Greant presented Hiveminder on The Lab with Leo Laporte.

I'm bummed out because this (from all accounts glowing) presentation is only available to those of you in Canada and Australia for the time being. It will end up at the link above eventually, but for now those of us in the US need to sit tight.