My life is pretty disorganized with stuff at school, work, and extracurriculars. For a few months now I’ve been encouraged to get a planner instead of keeping it all in my head. Now don’t get me wrong, I love taking physical notes and doing homework on paper with my nice pens and such. However, I do need a planner that syncs from my phone, laptop, and desktop.

I’ve been scouring for an open source solution to all this and a few months ago, I found Super Productivity. It had pretty much all of what I needed, places to put down tasks, a pomodoro timer, clients for desktop and mobile, and a place to see my progress. I didn’t use its syncing features though, because, it only allows dropbox, webdav, and local file sync. I thought it was pretty incomplete.

Over the course of this week I realized that I had a NAS that I could access outside of home so I could sync everything with my synology drive folder, allowing uploading and downloading of the .json file across all my devices. This works extremely well and very seamlessly. Now, I have a completely open source solution that doesn’t really ping any servers apart from saving a .json file locally and then syncing to my server. It’s a dream come true and works works amazingly.

After seeing how much this piece of software has transformed my life, I am hoping to share this and hope you guys will start using it as well and support this dev. Planners usually cost me around $10 or so, I’ll probably give the dev at least that much once my paycheck rolls in.

https://github.com/johannesjo/super-productivity

  • In regards to productivity, you could also take a look at Get Things Done or Bullet Journal as time/task organization frameworks, or Zettelkasten if you need data/knowledge organization.

  • flatbield@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Thanks for posting this. Interesting.

    Keep in mind that you will have to decide what works for you. My experience for me is that there is a sweet spot. These is under planing and over planning. You will have to find the sweet spot yourself.

    Also for me what I use is Thunderbird for contacts, calendar, and tasks. Then Joplin and Zim for notes. Recurrent tasks I use tasks… but bigger projects I just ouline in my notes app. For really big projects I’ll put it in a project planning tool and use Pert or Monte Carlo planning which is a totally different thing mostly for work and team management. For home I sync all this through Nextcloud but synology is a great choice too. For work I just kept I all on my laptop. Good not to have any work stuff on personal devices.

          • T0RB1T@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            Weaker copyleft. Doesn’t guarantee freedom the way GPL does.

            If someone were to make a proprietary derivative using the MIT licensed code, that would be allowed. Their source code changes aren’t required to be shared and licensed under a FLOSS license.

            GPL on the other hand, guarantees (legally, not always in practice) that any derivatives are to be licensed the same way, so they must remain FLOSS.