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ThinkingRock - Collect and Process All Your Thoughts with GTD Methodology

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trwhite ThinkingRock is a free software application for collecting and processing your thoughts following the David Allen’s Getting Things Done (GTD) methodology.

ThinkingRock allows you to collect your thoughts and process them into actions, projects, information or future possibilities. You can review all of your actions, projects and other information quickly and easily to see what you need to do or to choose what you want to do at a particular time.
ThinkingRock features:

  • Multi-platform: use it at home and at work, written in Java thus run on Linux, Macintosh, or Windows (see platform requirements). The data file is separate so you can transfer the small data file between computers using an USB key or email;
  • User Feedback and User reviews. Very good feedback from users: it changed their life, allowed them to at last implement GTD, best GTD tool they found, etc;
  • Future: more functionality to be implemented based on users suggestions and our own ideas;
  • Project Structure: unlike many task management applications, Thinking Rock lets you group your actions in projects and sub-projects. Two views are available to display your tasks: a project tree or a list of actions;
  • Stop procrastination: it gets you moving on your thoughts by encouraging you to think of the next physical action to do;
  • Manual and screen help provided;
  • Free customer support through our forum or email (use contact page)

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ThinkingRock is free, you can download it from ThinkingRock Download page. ThinkingRock is a pure Java application. You will need a Java Runtime Environment (JRE) version 1.5.0. If you are using a Macintosh, you will need Mac OS 10.4 at the minimum. It has been tested on Linux (Fedora 4), Mac OS X (10.4.7) and Windows (XP).

ThinkingRock is easy to use, easy to load, works offline. There are demos that explain clearly how to use it with pratical examples. For more screenshots, visit the Screenshot page.

Mon, Apr 2, 2007

Freeware, Internet News

1 Comments For This Post

  1. PIPS Says:

    Thinkpad is good. Embrace computer security.

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