Monday, June 16, 2008

A Self-Writing To-Do List

Now it is becoming more 'future' like. Many of people claim for importance of memo and scheduling but bringing pocket book is inconvenient. Thanks to development of voice and speech recognition, I can be more punctual.

New online schedulers rely on natural-language processing to get you organized.
The problem with to-do lists and schedules is that you need to fill them out. Now, a new generation of free online schedulers promises to end that drudgery. These new Web applications use natural-language processing to interpret spoken commands and ordinary written sentences to build calendars and personal organizers.
Perhaps the simplest of the new generation of schedulers is Presdo, based in San Francisco, which launched in late April to help users collaborate to schedule meetings and other events. Borrowing from Google's successful bag of tricks, Presdo's home page is as simple as it gets: just a floating text box. Type in "have brunch with Margaret on Sunday," and Presdo translates your command into data, bringing you to a page where you and your guests can check and tweak the details of your event. More details can be found by clicking this.

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