View allAll Photos Tagged Gettingthingsdone
A trick I like to use to make it look as if I'm reading one thing, when in fact I'm reading something completely different, is to hide one book or magazine inside another.
In this picture, for example, it appears that I'm reading a book about productivity...but I'm not.
Ian Fleming ain't got nuthin' on me!
My mini Tickler File covers a rolling two week period and keeps my upcoming LEGO auctions organised. (I sell LEGO minifigs. Read more about it at my Brick Trader blog.)
A 'real' Tickler File (a rolling month rather than a rolling fortnight) looks more like this.
It's that time of the year again when I read about how to work better rather than actually doing any work.
Merlin Mann, in a Daring Fireball t-shirt, discusses how he gets things done with a rake sticking out of his head. Photographer: Doug Whitmore.
Every day I run through a checklist to maintain my Getting Things Done system. This is how my check-in list currently stands.
This printer handles my normal A4 in a paper cassette in the bottom and my A7 register cards for my Hipster PDA.
The bibster parked up in my manual office.
There is more on organization tools on my website www.judyofthewoods.net
The Reference pages are really just a place to jot down items that maybe have no project or infact any home but instead are items that are really just perminant things to remember. This may be smilar to the GTD Ticklers (which I have covered previous) but while Ticklers are items in the long term future that must not be forgotten they will one day turn into projects. Reference items are also items in the long term future that must not be forgotton but they never turn into projects, they are simply facts.
For instance, the registration number for my car, phone numbers, serial numbers, radio frequencies, details of my ideal pen or books I would like to read. Just facts, mostly dateless.
The Reference pages get included within the Weekly Review and so any items in there are never forgotton and at least once a week its contents are reviewed which means it never goes stale
Mini filing rack made of a couple of wood battens, some hardboard and fence straining wire. Here the quick file/retrieve notch can be seen.
There is more on organization tools on my website www.judyofthewoods.net
PoIC (Pile of Index Cards)関連ツール一式 アイデアや作業環境などなど。
記事掲載URL:http://next-action.net/
記事掲載URL:Hipster PDA的 自作アイデア&テンプレート集<
インデックスカードの統計をタグの種類別に算出するツール。EXCELを使います。
直接インデックスカードにプリントアウト出来る様、レイアウトをPoICに最適化。
そのまま記録カードとして利用出来ます。
何か良いネーミングがありましたら是非教えて下さいませ。。
Aki's PoICalc 1.0
xls file is available from next-action.net/2008/11/11/poicalc10/.
web site:
After going through stacks of junk mail and old bills, I had a heaping pile of discardable paper. Just think that a week ago, this was all in piles around my apartment. Even now I wonder how I didn't go nuts with all this "stuff" around. Then again, how do I know I *didn't*?
You can see my laptop and my notebook for sketching user interfaces. Plenty of room to spare for other stuff like my copy of Agile Web Development with Rails or Quicksilver. :)
It's in my purse whenever it is not on my desk.
Inspired by a small comment discussion on an emdot blog post about my Getting Things Done fetish, er, I mean, focus. I was telling Bean and KB how the book is with me at all times, worn and read. :)
I know this makes me look like a nerd. Wait. Maybe a better way to word that would be, I know I'm a nerd. :) But this week I am embracing my nerdlieness. :)