![]() ![]() After all, it’s not practically possible for the human mind to keep track of ever-growing contact details. But human errors are bound to creep in irrespective of how much efficiency you try to put into work. Bigger and better things are being expected out of people who are juggling with numerous clients under one roof. This is enabling them to deal with the growing complexities at workplace. So might cost 2-3 years of work depending of the number of developers available (I'm used to single developer 'teams' ).The world is getting more competitive with every passing day as people are getting more technically sound. It brings different issues, but I think it worth the costs.īut well taking here about pretty big refactor, I guess. That are surely things which the devs at google/Chromium have seen properly. That's one of the issue with current implementation of EssentialPIM, it's running in single thread for all components (so e-mail downloading, is not 100% background process). But must be build alike being extensions. This doesn't mean I want something which can be 'extended' by extensions. ![]() Which Chromium kind of does related to separate process/ sandboxes. So bugs not starting to flow across all components. One approach is to build it 'modular' (similar to extensions). However this is not because of 'demand' at user side, but more development issue. Until the code becomes screwed (to complex or riddled with bugs) and the untangling begins. Those components will collide into one application. So I seeing it going onto same direction from different starting points. Didn't test the e-mail support yet, but if it renders as a tab in the sidebar (it becomes interesting). And is in fact rebuilding Opera (which was also more a Mozilla Application Suite). Vivaldi has the most potential/interesting feature set. The extension redesign made me finally move too (landed by Vivaldi so more or less Opera, but that couldn't get my approval back in the day because of Presto (some version before). So concept was OK, but lacking notes.Ĭurrently I tend to walk around Mozilla Gecko engine. And surely not properly design to switch between modules easily. However Mozilla Application Suite didn't support Notes, & calendar (?). And well not big feeling I missed out on something by using Firefox, in comparison to Mozilla Application Suite. Always assumed that Firefox would become the Mozilla Application Suite at the end (with focus on the engine on the start). I moved pretty quick to FireFox back in the day. ![]() But well not sure why that failed? Would look for the mistakes made back then (probably to much focus area's to work on at the same time) and somewhat to do with they Browser Engine rebuild. Strong points of EssentialPIM (Password Manager & contact manager where also present in TreeDBNotes).Īnd there is a change that if EssentialPIM would have embedded browser (Chromium) with clipping support to notes) I properly would run EssentialPIM the whole day.Īnd yes, we where here before (in some sense): Mozilla Application Suite nowdays SeaMonkey. However RN/MyInfo/InfoQube don't have a e-mail client/ password manager/Contact manager. To Chromium approach of MyInfo is again really interesting. RightNote is again improvement (but multi-database handling pain, and the RichTextView component not totally handle all HTML stuff. I outgrow TreeDBNotes (wrong database structure, speed became the issue couldn't handle search 50.000 notes speedy manner. However somehow developers are 'done' with it (single person company's). Biggest issue for CRIMPERS not how it functions (so workflow). General advice here, take look at the competition and copy/mimic their good idea's (InfoQube/RN/MyInfo are my favorites). Never missed it in MyInfo/RightNote/TreeDBNotes. CTRL+Enter sibling.ĬTRL+N could be used for with dialog (if this needed somehow).ĭon't distinct between 'root' and sibling. Enter in tree should insert a new note below (no dialog). However current 'shortcuts' at EssentialPIM is really one of the worst (sorry). As posted before, I have used plenty of PIM managers. ![]()
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