“Getting Things Done”, the workplace religion that tries to atone for the fact that all this technology hasn’t made us one whit more productive.
My Personal Approach
- Zero Sum Game - using search folders in Outlook and Mail.app for e-mail Judo
- Kinky GTD - using custom views in Outlook
- Custom Folders - hacking project-specific dashboards for Outlook
Resources
Category | Date | Link | Notes |
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CLI Tools | todo.sh | part of the great todo.txt approach |
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remind | |||
Methods | Emory's GTD Whitepaper | which I’ve shamefully neglected for a while now. |
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43 Folders Wiki | you need not look any further. |
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The Noguchi Filing System | also known as ls -artl –time=atime in UNIXland |
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Re-Using Existing Desktop Applications | My own setup | using Outlook views, Citrix for universal access, and whatever PDA happens to be on my belt. |
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The Kinkless GTD System | using OmniOutliner. |
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Using Mail.app and AppleScript for GTD | |||
Web-based Applications | Tracks | multi-user server-based solution, extremely slick, written in Ruby on Rails. |
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d3 | another TiddlyWiki-based “kinkless” GTD application. |
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Fast Track | for more conventional Project Management, written in Python and TurboGears. |
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GTDTiddlyWiki | all your tasks are belong to you. |
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Monkey GTD | TiddlyWiki based - the new hotness. |
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Next Action | a JavaScript-based application that, like TiddlyWiki, is completely self-contained. |
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GTDGmail | brilliant if you use Gmail, useless if you don’t. |