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PAX Coworkingで実施された仕事に役立つ勉強会、第一弾 GTD Workshopの様子です。講師はPAXメンバーでもある大塚さん。
The GTD (Getting Things Done) workshop, it's the 1st session of workshop for business at the PAX Coworking.
Lecturer is Mr. Otsuka a member of the PAX.
with 19 mm Bulldog clip and sawn off Pentel mechanical pencil. Another small mock-up with fabric cover next to it.
A sum up of key tips from Getting Things Done - a book by David Allen. Sketched from a talk by Jill Christiaens of EMBL-EBI in April 2018
It doesn't happen very often, but I was finally able to clear through my email inbox after the trip and get it down to zero messages. That's right, it's clear.
The finished paper covered jotter with pencil groove and paper. The small Bulldog clips also help retain the pencil. The thickness of the jotter is to allow for a pencil slot and to stop the clips from making the base uneven.
There is more on organization tools on my website www.judyofthewoods.net
Large metal drawer with some of my reference files in plain yellow folders. Labels are written with my Brother P-Touch 1280VP.
Stored in the closet. Needs to be cleaned up-keep all my pens, pencils,stickys, index cards, clips, etc here.
Amazing, compartents for my coffee cup, moleskine, ipod headphones and iPod. What you can't see, mouse in the other side pocket and iPod data cable in the second open pocket behind the headphones.
PAX Coworkingで実施された仕事に役立つ勉強会、第一弾 GTD Workshopの様子です。講師はPAXメンバーでもある大塚さん。
The GTD (Getting Things Done) workshop, it's the 1st session of workshop for business at the PAX Coworking.
Lecturer is Mr. Otsuka a member of the PAX.
5×3の情報カードへ直接プリントアウト
next action cards for PoIC ver.1.01d
PDF file is available from next-action.net/2008/10/24/nextactioncards-for-poic-ver101d/.
Don't miss the original size picture (1.9MB)
From Return to Flight.
A close-up view of a portion of Space Shuttle Discovery’s underside is featured in this image photographed by STS-114 Mission Specialist Steve Robinson during the mission’s third spacewalk. Robinson’s shadow is visible on the thermal protection tiles. (Image Credit: NASA)
After much soul searching and asking for help from helpful people on the 43folders google group, I have decided to try for the upteenth time to implement GTD but using a simple paper edition to grasp the whole concept before moving onto more complex tools.
so this is what two years worth of notecard jottings looks like, when you can't keep up with putting them into the computer. infoglut.
headings are:
* abby (object-oriented database project)
* art (ideas for paintings)
* yr (psychological and spiritual ideas and quotes)
* unsorted (lists of things to do, books to get, words to look up, etc)
* school (undergrad stuff - biochemistry, proteins, etc)
* unused (blank cards)
* half-used (one side used)
* used (both sides used, hence useless, except as filling)
In OF you can create folders, which I had been using for basic collection (work, personal, school, etc) and keeping individual projects inside of it.
Lately I've been feeling overwhelmed by overdue items and that it just wasn't organized well. Of course The David would say that it's probably because I haven't been doing the weekly review, and he'd be right. But I was curious about how others were using the folder hierarchy to sort their stuff. One person wrote that they had been using it as a place for their vertical planning.
In this screen shot I've started something to that effect. In GTD you should start on the "runway"- the next actions that you can take. Then you assemble a project around that, then an area of focus, then a goal (it goes on from there) that you are trying to achieve.
I started with tasks then created a project around it. But then I took a different approach to folders. I created an Area of Focus folder that contains individual projects and put that inside a Goal folder. You can see that I've got some blank spots in there that I'm trying to figure out still. I'm also labeling them AF and G until I get more items into it and hopefully can distinguish the goals from the areas of focus more easily.
It's been mentally taxing to reverse engineer a folder hierarchy but I think it will be worth it. Since attending the GTD: The Roadmap seminar I've learned the value of vertical planning, but it's always been stored somewhere else. This is exciting to see all in one place.
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.
I had 10-15 minutes to kill this morning, so I turned an old print into a nice compact cover for my next-action lists.
Pocket mods:
www.pocketmod.com/app/index.html
Thanks Darren for that.
And the uses, Thanks Brad for that.
Getting things done - the book.
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!