Hi Thorsten, Thanks for the thoughts. Clarification: I send my accountability partner a summary of MY committed actions for the day for him to review. We dont' collaborate, and he does not touch or change my tasks. (Although he does send me a list of his own tasks, and how well he did each day.) It's important to send the tasks by e-mail so I know he'll see them right away (and that will keep me accountable). If I send him a link, I know he may or may not view the file if and when he has time. As for using Agenda and hitting > to move a task to the next day, there are two problems with this: 1. this does not change the state of a @didnotdo task to @todo 2. for habits (using the format SCHEDULED: <2012-03-03 Sat +1d>), if I miss a day and then try to mark a habit DONE today, it stamps the habit done for the day I missed, rather than stamping it done today and recording that I did not do it on the day I was supposed to do it. On Sat, Mar 3, 2012 at 1:56 PM, Thorsten wrote: > Peter Salazar writes: > > Hi Peter, > without claiming being an expert org-mode user, I had the following > thoughts when reading your post: > > > I have an accountability partner with whom I exchange daily "committed > > actions." Every morning, I e-mail him a list of the tasks I commit to > > completing that day. > > Why sending per email? Why not getting a free private(!) git repo (1GB) > at assembla.com and cooperatively work on one or several org file(s) in > that repo? > > > When I complete a task, I mark it DONE. If I don't complete a task > > that day, I mark it @didnotdo and manually cut and paste it to the > > next day. > > > > Every night, I send him a report of which actions I did and which ones > > I did not do. (I find I get so much more done since I started making > > daily commitments to someone other than myself.) > > If you both work on the same file using git, the current state of > affairs will always be clear, as well as who did what at what time (and > pushed it to the repo). > > > 1. Given that I'm creating my daily task list manually, is there an > > easy way, when I mark a task @didnotdo, to automatically move it to > > the next day's list and change its state to @todo? > > When I have a TODO task in the agenda that I did not complete today, I > just change the date to tomorrow in the agenda using '>'. > If you don't do that, it will appear anyway in the agenda as overdue > task. > > > -- > cheers, > Thorsten > > >