
I just fixed my iPod! After at least a year of being without it, I have it back!
My wife told me about
this trick, and it worked! I have such a feeling of accomplishment, and not just because of the iPod fix. For the past couple of years, I've been adhering to David Allen's Getting Things Done system. I have my ups and downs, but each time that I have an up, the concepts and habits become more strongly reinforced, and I'm building a system over the years that is based on the core concepts in GTD.
Over the past few months, I have been so swamped with work, that I have literally been working every evening and every weekend for several months. In the past month or so, the pressure has mounted so much that I had to juggle multiple development tasks on multiple machines and multiple platforms at the same time. So, while a build was happening for 5 minutes on machine A, I would work on a different task on machine B. Or while I'm testing on machine A, machine B is doing a build. I also used the interstitials to go through the few emails that have built up since the last time I checked. I get to Inbox Zero almost every time. Here's Merlin Mann's talk on Inbox Zero.
2 comments:
Inbox Zero? No wonder you never answer our e-mails!
Well, I've been listening to the Inbox Zero talk (visuals seemed option) and purging/sorting my massive archive of e-mails while I did it. Of course, I'd created a handful of subfolders before the guy said Don't Create Subfolders, but hey -- what's done is done. And I could have deleted more, but then I realized that my archive was just that -- an archive. Easily searchable, etc.
The best thing, though, was finding the one e-mail from someone I really owed an e-mail to. So I send her that (complete with imbedded photos!) which shows that it was all worth it. So thanks for the link!
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