Blair, yeah! Not a hard-science geek, but still a geek. Spock was my first geek, though. (Yeah, that's how old I am)
I started playing a bit with Taskwarrior today. I think I like it better than DevTodo, but I'm not sure if I could use it for everything. There's so much more that one can do with a wiki.
I'm favouring IkiWiki as a wiki because the way it uses revision-control (git is one, but can also use svn and others) means that one can update the wiki from the command-line with vim (vim file; git add; git commit; git push) as well as the usual way from the web.
And because the plugins are Perl, I find plugins very easy to write for it (longtime Perl hacker, me).
Which means it isn't beyond imagining that I might be able to hack together a script usable by maildrop (or some other mail filter) to be able to email myself a note, and have it added automatically to a personal wiki.
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I started playing a bit with Taskwarrior today. I think I like it better than DevTodo, but I'm not sure if I could use it for everything. There's so much more that one can do with a wiki.
I'm favouring IkiWiki as a wiki because the way it uses revision-control (git is one, but can also use svn and others) means that one can update the wiki from the command-line with vim (vim file; git add; git commit; git push) as well as the usual way from the web.
And because the plugins are Perl, I find plugins very easy to write for it (longtime Perl hacker, me).
Which means it isn't beyond imagining that I might be able to hack together a script usable by maildrop (or some other mail filter) to be able to email myself a note, and have it added automatically to a personal wiki.