Here at TOPP, we've been using Fresh Direct for a while now for our office groceries (even while being critical of them on one of our blogs). It's easy -- we can order online and have food delivered right to the office. However, the packaging Fresh Direct uses is really outrageous; items are delivered in cardboard boxes, and are packed as if they're traversing the Atlantic, with on or two items per box surrounded by layers upon layers of packaging and padding. No longer. This week, we switched to Max Delivery, a service that offers same day delivery of many products within Manhattan. Max Delivery is a hybrid of Fresh Direct and Urban Fetch/Kozmo -- offering a full online catalog of staples as well as select items from NYC merchants. The kicker (for us at least) is their reusable bag program. Instead of packed boxes, they deliver using reusable shopping bags, with no extra packaging. Simply pay a $1.50 deposit for each bag, and return them upon next pickup. In between deliveries, you're free to use the bags for your own shopping. To boot, the grocery prices are lower at Max Delivery than at Fresh Direct (or so I'm told).

For a while now, I've been using Chandler to keep track of my to-dos. Chandler is a semi-historic open source project which I've been following ever since I read Dreaming in Code (and in many ways, it's saga parallels ours at The Open Planning Project with our work on OpenPlans) I've been rooting for it through the last several releases, and have eagerly anticipated updates. So, I was intrigued when I came across this post, which compares a handful of new to-do management applications for Mac. My first reaction was "this field is getting pretty crowded," and my second was "interesting to see that Chandler's not on that list." Finally, my third reaction, after having checked out some of the tools, was "wow, these are just like Chandler, only better." Maybe it's because it takes forever for it to load up, or that it takes forever for it to shut down, or perhaps it's the fact that it heats up my computer and makes my fan go into overdrive every time I use it, but Chandler just hasn't been working very well for me. It's a shame, really, because the project has such a long history, and is backed by so many good intentions. But when it comes to the final level of polish and the feeling that the program gives you when you use it, it's just not there yet. Of the applications featured in the comparison, the two I looked closely at were OmniFocus and Things. OmniFocus is the more powerful of the two, and is actually quite similar to Chander in many ways (both have "Clean up" button in exactly the same place). Both are proprietary applications that come at a price (OmniFocus is $79 and Things is $49), but I'm not an open source hard-liner (I'm typing this on a Mac); I'm willing to pay for software if it actually makes my life easier, though of course I prefer to use and support open source tools. I've been using Things for a few days now, and in terms of usability and addictiveness it's got Chandler beat hands down (at least for my needs). It's still pre-release, but the fundamental experience is very good, and the really important details are done right. It does the things I need it to and doesn't try to do the rest. Creating, organizing, and viewing tasks is quick and easy, and the views they present me with let me focus on what I'm working on at the moment.

Above: Chandler's main screen

Above: OmniFocus' main screen

Above: Things' main screen So, the question is: how come these new applications are better (or seem better to me) than Chandler? Offhand, I can think up a few potential reasons:
Chandler paved the way for many innovative features in task management (e.g., turning tasks into calendar items). Not particularly likely.
And on to the more likely reasons:
Chandler is too complicated, and these other applications do less, better. Yes.
Chandler couldn't cross the chasm between early interested techies and the mainstream market. Seems true. Interestingly, Things seems to be starting with the mainstream market and doing well.
Chandler had too big a team and too much funding. This much seems to be widely understood. Looking through the project wiki, one can find years worth of theories and plans, but somehow those were never translated into actual, usable product, whereas Things was produced by a small, balanced team including just two developers.
It's too bad, of course, but it definitely provides another valuable case study in the danger of not getting real early enough.


I stumbled upon SmartyPig this week while looking through the Happy Cog website, after reading a Zeldman post, linked to by Daring Fireball, which was brought to me via Melkjug. Gotta love the blogosphere. Now, after all that, not only do I have a new Favorite Web App, but I have a new bank. My friends know that I'm a bit of a Web App Slut, willing to give away my most personal information for a chance to try out a shiny new web app (here's looking at you, Wesabe). Well, I'm not doing anything to dispel that notion today. Here's the gist of it: Smarty Pig is a social savings bank, where you create personal savings goals and then set up automated deposits to reach them. They have a noble goal: to get people back in the habit of saving, by making it fun. And I must say, I think it's a great idea. I haven't gotten into the social side of it yet, but the idea there is that you can create public goals that your friends and others can contribute to. So far, I've just been experimenting with creating private goals; for example, saving a little $$ for our federal income taxes (for which we always seem to come up a bit short):

As you can see, your personal savings goals are tracked using a cute little piggy bank, which you can watch fill up and feel good about your progress (I already do, with my measly 10%). More importantly, the money is actually in a completely separate account, making it that much more difficult to spend in a moment of weakness. Meanwhile, you're earning 3.9%. I'm going to give this one a shot and see how it goes, but I have a feeling I'm going to like it
