GTD

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Very fine musician and student, Michael Girardot (check out his fantastic band, Antenna Inn), sent me a link to this very useful meeting management app.

Certainly a great thing for scheduling band rehearsals, etc.

One way to guarantee to make me happy, send me an email that starts (as Michael’s did) with the phrase: “I feel like being a maven.”

Thanks, Michael

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sandy

Sandy is a very well put together task list/reminder web-based app.

Basically, you sign up (it’s free), and get your unique email address to which you send to do items you want to keep track of and be reminded about.

For instance, I know I have to start writing a piece for Artists House tomorrow, so (using Quicksilver) I shot off an email to my Sandy address that looked like this:

Remember to start ah guide tomorrow morning @artists-house

From this email, Sandy found the significant words “remember” and “tomorrow,” created an item, and will send me an email tomorrow morning. The “@artists-house” thing is a tag (anything that follows the @ symbol - though, frustratingly, you can’t use multiple words unless they’re hyphenated).

The tagging aspect not only brings this into a GTD realm, but it allows you to get email updates based on specific items. For instance, as I add more Artists House items to my Sandy account, there may come a time when I want to see all of them. So, I just send an email to my Sandy account with the subject line “Lookup @artists-house.” Moments later, I get a detailed list emailed to me of all the items I have tagged with @artists-house, as well as the associated due dates, etc.

There are many more features to Sandy; including the very cool feature of using it to alert others to shared tasks simply by CCing them on an email to you Sandy account, as well as sending you reminders to your phone.

I believe Sandy will be very, very useful. It’s a beautifully executed app!

Man am I going through some brain drain at this point. This is entirely because I’ve gotten out of my rhythm, and have not been doing the things that this good Lifehacker article discusses.

In particular, I’ve not been using the fantastic Pzizz to help me meditate. Additionally, I’ve not been reading anything for enjoyment.

Instead it’s been non-stop push, push attempts at productivity.

Diminishing returns have set in. Time to regroup.

A bunch of buzz about a simple GTD-esque organization tool called TaskPaper.

I’ve been using it in the beta stage for a while, and do like it. It’s elegantly simple, and allows you to create contextualized (via the use of tags) projects and next actions.

It’s devoid of any real bells and whistles, and I frankly find this refreshing and helpful. I’ve been sort of frustrated by iGTD’s wonkiness recently, which seems a result of it’s overly-feature rich structure.

Here’s the basic workflow:

    •You create a project by typing in the name of the project and adding a colon at the end.
    •You create a new task (action) by beginning the action with a dash.
    •You tag (contextualize) the task by typing the @ symbol immediately in front of the tag you want to
    associate with the task.
    •When you complete a task you can click on the bullet next to the task to generate a (satisfying) line
    through the completed item.

Try it out with a 30-day free demo, and if you dig it, it’ll set you back $18.95

Getting Things Done, and specifically David Allen’s work on this topic, is a central focus here at 9GS.

However, even with my 10 Minute Crash Course on GTD, some people feel that the system is a bit too rigid/demanding/doctrinaire.

To these people I suggest checking out this post which hits a number of GTD principles but from a perhaps more accessible angle. Specifically, the idea of breaking projects (though they don’t use the term “projects”) into small, manageable steps is very closely aligned to the GTD next action methodology.

Additionally, I’m delighted by the exhortation here to get those dreams you have for things you want to accomplish out of your head and into some tangible form; even if that’s just writing the idea down. This is a crucial step in concrete your ideas, and beginning to move them forward, and it’s something I stress in my writing and teaching on entrepreneurship

Certainly worth a look, though I don’t think it’s a substitute for the GTD system.

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