![]() Most of these are self-explanatory – if I invite somebody they can either decline, or accept, and if all goes well the card move to the “published” section. Since I do not want to reveal the names of people I haven’t interviewed yet, I cannot post a screenshot, but I have several columns here: The How I Fail board is especially important to emphasize, since multiple people are involved. Other boards that I use are for my blog posts and How I Fail interviews. Several cards link to the projects for those specific papers. ideas on the left, published papers on the right). ![]() The columns are similar to the physical version, going left to right in chronological order (i.e. This was a picture of my physical version from a few months ago:Īnd here is how the Todoist version looks like (image credit: Todoist): ![]() The board that I wrote about before, and that Todoist featured, is my overview of research projects. Todoist was kind enough to feature one of my boards in their first blog post on boards, but in this post I give a few more details on how I now use the boards feature! Research project overview What I didn’t know at the time, is that Todoist was working on a boards feature, which I first used in a beta version, and which has now been released! Here I described a physical Kanban board as well as “Kanban-like” workflows in various apps. I only wrote about how I use Kanban for managing research projects quite recently.
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