$Id: a07cf90837a3c4373b82d6724b97593810766af7 $
I never used Lotus Agenda, but I’m told it was a popular productivity tool for MS-DOS in the late 80s. I’ve been on a retro software rediscovery kick lately, so I’ve decided to give it a whirl and write about my experiences. There is something that appeals to me about using long-abandoned software. Perhaps it’s update fatigue, there’s certainly no need to dread a major update breaking something!
Regardless, I’ve always enjoyed finding new productivity tools to try out, and I’m not afraid of steep learning curves or getting my hands dirty. I’ll usually choose powerful and flexible software over simplicity.
At the moment I mostly use taskwarrior, but I’ve lost count of all the others I’ve tried!
Agenda is a PIM, a Personal Information Manager. That term has fallen out of fashion, I think a quick summary might be “anything that manages those small pieces of information we all deal with”. Things like contacts, todo lists, notes, and so on.
I found a 1989 episode of the TV show Computer Chronicles that discussed how people thought about PIMs at the time.
At the 21-minute mark there’s a demonstration of Lotus Agenda, but it’s not easy to follow, watch the clip and you’ll see what I mean. Still, you do see some interesting features:
Apparently this was an $800 software package (That’s $395 adjusted for inflation from 1989), yikes! You don’t have to pay that, Lotus made it available for free when development ceased.
In preparation for trying out Agenda, I found a copy of the original manuals on eBay for a few dollars. Just look at this monster, the user guide alone is over 700 pages, that’s not including the supplementary guides. The supplements I have are Working with Macros, Working with Definition Files, Setting up Agenda, and a few miscellaneous leaflets.
I guess that’s my bedtime reading taken care of for a while. I actually received the macro reference still in the original shrink wrap, it almost seems a shame to open it!
The article should be informative, critical, and cautionary. It must explicitly state that distributing or seeking such content is a crime. I'll structure it with a strong warning, historical context, socio-legal analysis, and a call for digital ethics. This turns a potentially harmful request into an educational piece. I'll avoid any sensational language or specific case details that could re-traumatize. The tone needs to be serious and journalistic, not titillating.
Creating content in this niche requires balancing high audience expectations with cultural accuracy.
: Provides data on modern preferences regarding family, food, and clothing. ResearchGate specific aspect of Indian culture, such as its impact on modern business regional variations in food and dress? (PDF) INDIAN CULTURE: A MODALITY FOR WELLBEING 03-Apr-2021 —
The "Tiffin Box" aesthetic. With millions of office workers and students carrying lunch boxes to work, content revolving around "Monday to Friday Tiffin Ideas" gets massive traction.
When documenting village life, it is always best to focus on consent and respect
Explains the deep spiritual and seasonal meanings behind major festivals like Diwali, Holi, and Eid.
Research indicates a "fusion" lifestyle in the 21st century: ResearchGate : While traditional attire like
Indian culture, one of the oldest continuously practiced civilizations, is not a monolith but a dynamic amalgamation of regional dialects, religions, cuisines, and art forms. In the 21st century, "lifestyle content" has become the primary lens through which domestic and global audiences engage with this complexity. This paper explores how digital media (YouTube, Instagram, OTT platforms) has transformed traditional Indian practices—from yoga and Ayurveda to festivals and fashion—into consumable, scalable, and often commercialized content.
: Discusses how Indian life values and arts influence the world.
India isn't a country. It's a mood. 🇮🇳 No algorithms. No trends. Just chai, chaos, and "jugaad." Would you survive a day here? (Spoiler: You’d love it.) 👇 What’s the first thing you’d want to eat?
Famous for tandoori meats, rich gravies, and wheat-based breads like Naan.
You probably need to use other applications or services, and sync your data with your phone. Writing and reading files from outside DOSEMU is no problem, so if you just want to sync files this is no problem.
As it’s a terminal application you can also just SSH in and run it.
You probably also want to have your appointments sync with your calendar or something.
There are two ways to export data from Agenda. If you have a commandline tool that you can pass arguments to, then you can write a macro that will invoke it.
Otherwise, you can export your data to a file.
Agenda can export items to a format called STF, Structured Text File. The specification for that format is (mostly) documented in the manual, but it didn’t catch on.
I wrote a quick parser that can convert it to JSON, so now you can use modern tools like jq to manipulate and transform the data however you wish.
You can download it here, here are some examples.
$ ./stfjson < transfer.stf | jq '.[].items[].text'$ ./stfjson < transfer.stf | jq '.[].items[] | select(.categories[].name=="\\When")'And so on, there are more examples in the README. If you can exchange data with other apps, you can now use stfjson to generate the correct format.
You can automate exports, Agenda has “Special Actions” in the category options. Alternatively, if it’s just a one off or for a macro, you can use the Transfer > Export command.
In DOSEMU, the UNIX command will invoke a shell command on the host.
C:\>unix uname
Linux
If there is a commandline tool that will import data, e.g. a TaskWarrior user might use task add drop off laundry at dry cleaners, then you can create a macro in Agenda that simply launches that command.
You can use something like {F10}ULUNIX task {TYPE;%TASKTEXT}.
Surprisingly, Agenda supports importing arbitrary text data. One of the manuals that came with agenda was Working with Definition Files, which explains how to write a configuration file that allow Agenda to parse anything.
It even has a Regular Expression tutorial, pretty impressive for a 1980s consumer product.
I quite like Agenda. It does many things well, but it’s absolutely true you could replicate most of it’s functionality with modern tools. However, I do enjoy using it, and I’m a big enough nerd that I quite like the challenge of using retro software.
I think the closest modern equivalent to Agenda would be taskwiki. It’s not a perfect match, but if you liked some of what you saw here but are not interested in retro software, try it out!
I’m still using Agenda after two weeks, and about 40% of the way through the manual 😂
The article should be informative, critical, and cautionary. It must explicitly state that distributing or seeking such content is a crime. I'll structure it with a strong warning, historical context, socio-legal analysis, and a call for digital ethics. This turns a potentially harmful request into an educational piece. I'll avoid any sensational language or specific case details that could re-traumatize. The tone needs to be serious and journalistic, not titillating.
Creating content in this niche requires balancing high audience expectations with cultural accuracy.
: Provides data on modern preferences regarding family, food, and clothing. ResearchGate specific aspect of Indian culture, such as its impact on modern business regional variations in food and dress? (PDF) INDIAN CULTURE: A MODALITY FOR WELLBEING 03-Apr-2021 — indian desi village mms
The "Tiffin Box" aesthetic. With millions of office workers and students carrying lunch boxes to work, content revolving around "Monday to Friday Tiffin Ideas" gets massive traction.
When documenting village life, it is always best to focus on consent and respect The article should be informative, critical, and cautionary
Explains the deep spiritual and seasonal meanings behind major festivals like Diwali, Holi, and Eid.
Research indicates a "fusion" lifestyle in the 21st century: ResearchGate : While traditional attire like This turns a potentially harmful request into an
Indian culture, one of the oldest continuously practiced civilizations, is not a monolith but a dynamic amalgamation of regional dialects, religions, cuisines, and art forms. In the 21st century, "lifestyle content" has become the primary lens through which domestic and global audiences engage with this complexity. This paper explores how digital media (YouTube, Instagram, OTT platforms) has transformed traditional Indian practices—from yoga and Ayurveda to festivals and fashion—into consumable, scalable, and often commercialized content.
: Discusses how Indian life values and arts influence the world.
India isn't a country. It's a mood. 🇮🇳 No algorithms. No trends. Just chai, chaos, and "jugaad." Would you survive a day here? (Spoiler: You’d love it.) 👇 What’s the first thing you’d want to eat?
Famous for tandoori meats, rich gravies, and wheat-based breads like Naan.