More Getting Things Done
Matt Henderson has written an interesting entry on Getting Things Done:
According to Peter Drucker, one of the defining aspects of our generation is the fact that, as a society of information workers, many of us are responsible for defining both what we do, and how we get it done. Complicating matters, many of us work in environments (i.e. in front of internet-connected desktop computers) that provide us with a continual barrage of inputs (email, chats, browsing, RSS feeds, phone calls, etc.). Defining what we should do, how should do it, and then getting (the right) things done are some of the biggest challenges we face.
He goes on to describe his system which primarily uses Life Balance in conjunction with Hog Bay Notebook. I find the details of how people manage and organise their lives fascinating. Matt’s implementation of GTD is much more structured than mine, but that’s probably a good way to get into a routine and increases confidence in the security of the system. I’m finding that confidence in the system is almost the most important thing. The minute I think that something might be slipping through the net, the whole system tends to start to fall apart. However, my trusty paper notebook is working out well, and I’m getting into the habit of carrying it all the time.
Software bonanza
Filed under: — bsag @ 06:09 PM
It’s been a fantastic couple of days for great MacOS X software. First, Tinderbox 2.3 was released. The thing that immediately struck me was that the text is rendered much better, so notes are pretty to look at now. It seems like a minor point, but it was something that bugged me slightly before. There are a lot of much less visible changes to the kinds of attributes you can use, and to the actions and agents. I’m looking forward to digging a bit deeper into it in the next few weeks.
Then Ranchero Software released the public beta of NetNewsWire 2 and the new weblog editor, MarsEdit. NetNewsWire has some nice new features like Smart Lists (which work like Smart Playlists in iTunes), flagging of feeds and Search Engine subscriptions (so that you can search a huge number of feeds for entries on a particular topic). It seems to work very smoothly, and alsoâas you might expectâit interacts very well with MarsEdit. You can select an item in NNW and send it to MarsEdit, which opens a post with all the relevant URLs filled in. You can also set up a template so that entries generated in this way have a particular format. Both applications have gorgeous new icons designed by Bryan Bell and Jon Hicksâthe MarsEdit one is really cute, with a chubby little rocket orbiting a shiny Mars.
All I need now is for Macromates to release TextMate, and I’d be a really happy little geek.