lifetick
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1:30PM Angus Kidman | Aussie-developed goal tracking service Lifetick, which we’ve mentioned here a couple of times before, has upgraded with an obvious but useful feature: recurring tasks. More »
Lifetick Adds Recurring Tasks
1:30PM Angus Kidman | Aussie-developed goal tracking service Lifetick, which we’ve mentioned here a couple of times before, has upgraded with an obvious but useful feature: recurring tasks. More »
Organise
3:00PM Angus Kidman | Previously mentioned Australian-developed goal tracker Lifetick has added a new feature called “journal categories”, which lets you add custom categories to your journal (such as “save $60 a month”) and then graph your progress over time. Journal categories can also be entered on the iPhone version of the app. Lifetick is available in a free version which limits the number of goals you can set, costs $22 annually for the unlimited version.
Lifetick
More »
Lifetick Adds Custom Journal Entries
3:00PM Angus Kidman | Previously mentioned Australian-developed goal tracker Lifetick has added a new feature called “journal categories”, which lets you add custom categories to your journal (such as “save $60 a month”) and then graph your progress over time. Journal categories can also be entered on the iPhone version of the app. Lifetick is available in a free version which limits the number of goals you can set, costs $22 annually for the unlimited version.
Lifetick
More »
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1:12PM Angus Kidman | Aussie-developed Lifetick applies a shiny Web
2.0 interface to setting and managing goals, both long and short-term. Sure, it
feels a bit Oprah Winfrey at times (the first stage is setting Core Values and
Goals), but having an online system does make it easier to measure your
progress towards long-cherished ideas. You can tinker with the site for free in
a reduced functionality mode, though the full version costs US$20 a year.
More »
Lifetick adds shine to goal management
1:12PM Angus Kidman | Aussie-developed Lifetick applies a shiny Web
2.0 interface to setting and managing goals, both long and short-term. Sure, it
feels a bit Oprah Winfrey at times (the first stage is setting Core Values and
Goals), but having an online system does make it easier to measure your
progress towards long-cherished ideas. You can tinker with the site for free in
a reduced functionality mode, though the full version costs US$20 a year.
More »