I use a wiki page (in my personal Gitlab space of our company Gitlab instance):
- one wiki page per week
- every Monday, I copy over the wiki page to a new one
- I split sections between time-based, and "priority backlog" vs "low-priority backlog" (stuff that might get done in 2 months).
- I also keep a short list of general reminders at the bottom completely.
- I like using [x] to mark things done. Easy to review at the end of the week. Even sometimes ~~ to strike-trough, for extra satisfaction.
- If I had something not planned, I add it to the list, so that I don't despair at the end of the week, if I didn't do half of the things I should have.
- I pin the tab at the top of my tab list in Firefox, for quick access.
I like using Gitlab's wiki for this, since I can copy-paste the URL to an issue or specific project, and it automatically converts to something nicer. And while I could use the wiki history, instead of a new page, I find it easier to go back in time this way.
- one wiki page per week
- every Monday, I copy over the wiki page to a new one
- I split sections between time-based, and "priority backlog" vs "low-priority backlog" (stuff that might get done in 2 months).
- I also keep a short list of general reminders at the bottom completely.
- I like using [x] to mark things done. Easy to review at the end of the week. Even sometimes ~~ to strike-trough, for extra satisfaction.
- If I had something not planned, I add it to the list, so that I don't despair at the end of the week, if I didn't do half of the things I should have.
- I pin the tab at the top of my tab list in Firefox, for quick access.
I like using Gitlab's wiki for this, since I can copy-paste the URL to an issue or specific project, and it automatically converts to something nicer. And while I could use the wiki history, instead of a new page, I find it easier to go back in time this way.