You know what you never see in science fiction movies? Task management software. Why should Tony Stark mess around with stuff like Clear, Asana, or Getting Things Done™ when he can just bark vaguely worded orders at Jarvis, his artificially intelligent digital assistant? Obviously that makes for better visuals in the Iron Man franchise–but David Allen, creator and evangelist of GTD, is apparently working on a “meta-app” that sounds pretty darn Jarvis-like.
According to Fast Company, “What Allen has sought, for nearly three decades now, is a digital tool that actually abstracts list-making out of Getting Things Done, and offers instead more time to think about acting out the items on those lists.” In Allen’s own words, he laments the fact that “with (today’s) GTD ‘apps,’ you still have to think about what you want to accomplish… What I’m seeking is, could somebody, some system, please embody my intelligence about how I want to have data structured, and how I want it to come out?”
Allen is collaborating with Intentional Software on the still-secret app, and most of the interview consists of Allen’s hand-wavey descriptions of this “obsessively helpful, completely app-agnostic dashboard.” I highly doubt that whatever they’re cooking up can actually “embody [Allen’s] intelligence”, but the irony is that he’s actually onto something with that kind of talk. Why do high-powered executives and celebrities use human assistants as their primary “task management system”? Because it actually requires real intelligence to sort out what one’s “next action” should be from all the competing, constantly changing possibilities. Productivity software has its own “uncanny valley” problem: the closer it gets to intuitive, “human-like” behavior while still falling short (see: Siri), the more cumbersome and annoying it is to use. Which is why most of us just end up defaulting to the dumb-but-simple method of scribbling to-do’s down on Post-It notes (or their digital equivalent), even when more sophisticated tools are available.
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