Pagico (for Windows, Mac, Linux) at MacUpdate Promo
Started by Franz Grieser
on 1/15/2011
Franz Grieser
1/15/2011 9:56 am
Hi.
Pagico, a cross-plattform info manager, is available for 30$ (instead the regular 50$) at www.mupromo.com
It is a single-PC or Mac or Linux license, additional licenses are 5$. The update to the upcoming vs5 will be free.
Franz
Pagico, a cross-plattform info manager, is available for 30$ (instead the regular 50$) at www.mupromo.com
It is a single-PC or Mac or Linux license, additional licenses are 5$. The update to the upcoming vs5 will be free.
Franz
Stephen Zeoli
1/15/2011 3:08 pm
Anybody using Pagico? It looks pretty interesting. I'm especially intrigued by the cross-platform nature. I'd appreciate any insights anyone might be able to share. Thanks.
Steve
Steve
Franz Grieser
1/15/2011 4:35 pm
Hi.
I decided not to use it. What I need is a cross-plattform information storage tool for notes and web pages in order to exchange notes/stores web pages between my Windows PCs I use for working and the Mac I use for writing fiction and a non-fiction book I will start in March.
Pagico looks good. But it is a feature monster like Info Select. I simply do not need another calendar, todo manager and e-mail client.
So my quest continues.
Franz
I decided not to use it. What I need is a cross-plattform information storage tool for notes and web pages in order to exchange notes/stores web pages between my Windows PCs I use for working and the Mac I use for writing fiction and a non-fiction book I will start in March.
Pagico looks good. But it is a feature monster like Info Select. I simply do not need another calendar, todo manager and e-mail client.
So my quest continues.
Franz
msharp
1/15/2011 9:14 pm
Pagico seems to be great for me --- and by the way, it's not another calendar or email client. In fact, I think it has fewer (but better) features than its competitors. I highly recommend it.
Hugh
1/16/2011 1:02 pm
Mac.AppStorm carried a comprehensive review of Pagico last May: http://mac.appstorm.net/reviews/productivity-review/pagico-gtd-notes-and-contacts-together-at-last/
Although it makes a feature of its suitability for GTD, it doesn't seem from reading that review that it's as strictly GTD-compliant as say, Thinking Rock. It looks as if it's unusual, although not unique, amongst task managers in drawing up a simple, personal Gantt chart - perhaps useful for freelances. A strength seems to be its cross-platform capability - but also a weakness, insofar as that makes it less easy to programme it to connect with particular platform tools like the Mac OS X Address Book.
Although it makes a feature of its suitability for GTD, it doesn't seem from reading that review that it's as strictly GTD-compliant as say, Thinking Rock. It looks as if it's unusual, although not unique, amongst task managers in drawing up a simple, personal Gantt chart - perhaps useful for freelances. A strength seems to be its cross-platform capability - but also a weakness, insofar as that makes it less easy to programme it to connect with particular platform tools like the Mac OS X Address Book.
