July 1, 2009 10:00 AM
- Text
Delegate and Manage Projects with Colabolo
(MoneyWatch)
I have a lot of balls in the air all the time -- a ton of projects I'm working on myself, but I also assign stuff to other writers and rely on an ad hoc collection of handwritten notes, stuff in OneNote, and e-mail to keep track of it all. There has to be a better way -- and there is.
I recently discovered Colabolo, an awesome program that lets you keep track of all your tasks and collaborate with anyone you delegate to at the same time.
Colabolo lets you create multiple projects, and each project can have any number of tasks -- called "issues" -- that you can assign to yourself or anyone else on your team. If you use Colabolo just for yourself, it's kind of overkill for a desktop task manager. But when you add other people to the mix, everyone can collaborate by adding notes and changing task status, adding attachments, and reassigning issues. There are a ton of handy management features as well -- you can browse issue status by project, or roll all the issues up one high-level view. And there's an iPhone version coming.
The program is currently free, but the Web site warns that it'll cost about $10/user/month when it exits beta. That's a pretty steep price; here's to hoping for a really, really long beta. [Via TechCrunch]
I have a lot of balls in the air all the time -- a ton of projects I'm working on myself, but I also assign stuff to other writers and rely on an ad hoc collection of handwritten notes, stuff in OneNote, and e-mail to keep track of it all. There has to be a better way -- and there is.I recently discovered Colabolo, an awesome program that lets you keep track of all your tasks and collaborate with anyone you delegate to at the same time.
Colabolo lets you create multiple projects, and each project can have any number of tasks -- called "issues" -- that you can assign to yourself or anyone else on your team. If you use Colabolo just for yourself, it's kind of overkill for a desktop task manager. But when you add other people to the mix, everyone can collaborate by adding notes and changing task status, adding attachments, and reassigning issues. There are a ton of handy management features as well -- you can browse issue status by project, or roll all the issues up one high-level view. And there's an iPhone version coming.
The program is currently free, but the Web site warns that it'll cost about $10/user/month when it exits beta. That's a pretty steep price; here's to hoping for a really, really long beta. [Via TechCrunch]
-
Dave Johnson Dave Johnson has written three dozen books, including the best-selling How to Do Everything with Your Digital Camera, and covered technology for a long list of magazines that include PC World and Wired.
Follow on Twitter »
Latest Now in MoneyWatch
- Foreclosure pact: Enough help for homeowners?
- EU: Greece must cut deeper to get bailout
- Big banks, gov't officials strike $25B deal
- LinkedIn swings back to profit
- LinkedIn doubles revenue, beats growth estimates
- Kodak to stop making digital cameras, frames
- Market cap, schmarket cap, Apple still gets no respect
- Philip Morris Int'l income up nearly 8 percent
- Survey: Small biz plans big hires in 2012
- Freddie Mac: Mortgages inch higher but stay low
- Will the European debt crisis sink Obama's re-election?
- Banks in $25B deal to settle foreclosure abuses
- Joe Coffee: Scaling up without selling your soul
- Greek agreement accomplishes nothing
- 401K plans: New rules make costs clearer
- Are women leaders selling themselves short?
- Ask the Experts: New 401(k) rules
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Greece on strike as bailout deal in limbo
- Greece on strike as bailout deal in limbo
- De Beers: rough diamond sales up 27 percent
- Spain set to pass crucial labor market reforms
on Facebook
- Tenn. father charged with murdering couple who"unfriended" daughter on Facebook
- "Person to Person" with George Clooney
- Adele opens up about vocal cord surgery
on CBS News






