2007 Annual Report for Adrian McEwen

Welcome to the 2007 Annual Productivity Report. This looks back over your productivity for the past year, showing when you got the most done and pulling out some useful statistics from your tasks and how you complete them.

Headline Figures

During the year Adrian McEwen completed 719 tasks and added another 839.

Tags

Which tags were the most active during the year? While we can't say which were the most important, we can look at which tags were the most commonly used. In the tag clouds below, bigger and darker tags appeared more often in your completed or new tasks.

Which tags were most productive? The weightings here show which tags were most commonly used in completed tasks.

accounts actention adrian alpha beta3 beta4 blog bug cambridge car chris data datacocoon email focus garden hello home house hye hyperfocus inlandrevenue italy john madandbad marketing mcqn_ltd milla mp3player multiview Mum pad phonedev preparty printing rc1 realclip Rebecca relaunch rhekisham rjandreo Scottie someday talktome tdm testing thisweek toread town transl8 ubicomp voca6 waiting website

And which were the most popular? This shows the tags sorted by how frequently they were used in new tasks.

accounts actention adrian alpha beta3 beta4 blog bug cambridge car chris data datacocoon email focus garden hello home house hye hyperfocus inlandrevenue italy john madandbad marketing mcqn_ltd milla mp3player multiview Mum pad phonedev preparty printing rc1 realclip Rebecca relaunch rhekisham rjandreo Scottie someday talktome tdm testing thisweek toread town transl8 ubicomp voca6 waiting website

Punctuality and Timescales

From the day when it was added to your tasks, in 2007 it took on average 31.06 days before the task was completed.

Looking at the tasks which had a due date assigned, we can see how effective you were at completing them on time. The chart to the left shows how many of your dated tasks were completed early, on time or late.

The tasks which were late were on average 5.23 days late.

Productivity

Now let's see if there are any patterns to your productivity. We'll do this by taking all the tasks that you completed during the year, and comparing them based on the time of day or day of the week that they were completed.

From that we can find out if you get more done in mornings, for example, or at the weekend, or maybe you're super-productive on Tuesdays...

Obviously, this uses the time when you clicked "complete" for each task, so if you don't do that straight after completing the task then these results will be skewed. Even if you do mark your tasks as completed as soon as you finish them, the time that you are productive will be slightly before the data here because that's when you're actually doing the work.

Looking Forward

Finally, let's take a look at what there is still to do. This isn't a detailed examination of your open tasks - you can get that by browsing through your task lists - but a higher-level view of the task landscape.

At the end of 2007, you have 253 tasks still to do.Those tasks are spread across 25 different tags.

Looking at the number of tasks there are for each tag, and how many of those have been completed, we can estimate how far you are through any of your projects.

Of course, this is only useful for tags that are related to a particular project, and only you know if you've entered all the tasks yet.

Like the earlier tag clouds, the bigger and darker tags are those which occur more frequently. This cloud shows which tags have the most remaining tasks assigned.

accounts actention adrian alpha beta3 beta4 blog bug cambridge car chris data datacocoon email focus garden hello home house hye hyperfocus inlandrevenue italy john madandbad marketing mcqn_ltd milla mp3player multiview Mum pad phonedev preparty printing rc1 realclip Rebecca relaunch rhekisham rjandreo Scottie someday talktome tdm testing thisweek toread town transl8 ubicomp voca6 waiting website