October 14, 2005

Folder Life-Hackery

I was telling a colleague this afternoon about the way I've organized the folders on my hard-drive. It seemed like something that might be helpful to others out there, so I put together a quick "how to" as a kind of Karmic "thanks" for all of the "Getting Things Done" lifehacks I've gotten from sites like 43 Folders and Lifehacker. (It's a "Mac specific" tip... sorry WinX users... though quite possibly the unzipped folders might work fine on your machine.)

First, unzip the following file to your desktop. (Option click to download / Double click to unzip once it's there).

It'll look like this:

20051014_folder.jpg.

Open up a finder window. Make sure that you have it set to "Pane View".

20051014_PaneView.jpg


Drag the "_Files_&_Folders" folder from your Desktop into your "Documents" folder on the left hand side of the finder window. It should look like this when you're through:

20051014_Folder2.jpg

Drag the "_Files_&_Folders" folder from the "Documents" folder to the left hand pane below the "Music" folder and drop it. (This will create an alias to the original folder.)

20051014_Drag.jpg

Once you've "dropped" the folder it should look something like this:

20051014_Dropped.jpg

And that's it. You now have a made to order "Getting Things Done" type A-Z filing system. I've found it so much easier to find things in this virtual filing cabinet. "Receipts" go in the "R" folder. "Serial Numbers" go in the "S" folder. It's pretty easy to get used to dropping things into their appropriate folders as you go.

Simple, right?

Posted by Thomas at 05:52 PM | Comments (0)

May 11, 2005

Time Management for Anarchists

I found a wonderful flash animation a while back by novelist Jim Munroe.
From his site:

I've just finished a Flash adaptation of my Time Management for Anarchists seminar. I started doing the talk a year and a half ago at Canzine and have done it a half-dozen times since, mostly at infoshops and political bookstores (Austin, Montreal, Berkeley, Vancouver) and also at a couple of events (New Orleans Book Fair, the Vegetarian Food Fair). It's based on the paradoxical notion that anarchists have to be more organized than average if they don't want to depend on power structures, and presents some ideas on how to kick the boss habit.

(I've posted the actual animation rather than just linking. You'll find his original page here: Time Management for Anarchists: The Movie. It has a Creative Commons license and he's encouraged re-mixing. (The original .fla file can be found on his site.) The animation is about 8 minutes long and has alot of great tips that are well presented.

Posted by Thomas at 11:00 AM | Comments (0)

May 10, 2005

GTD + Tiddy Wiki = Sweet!

Damn, this is breathtaking...Check out the GTD TiddlyWiki.

I'm a huge fan of David Allen's Getting Things Done, and back in September I made a post about Tiddly Wiki when it first came out. At the time, Tiddly Wiki seemed cool, but I still couldn't get a handle on the whole "how to save your work" part. This most recent adaptation of the original concept has streamlined the process of saving your edits and made it GTD ready. I've begun playing around with using it locally on my HD, making the GTD Tiddly Wiki my homepage in Firefox. This way my next actions and projects are all one click away. Sweet!

Posted by Thomas at 08:43 PM | Comments (0)

January 19, 2005

Patching Your Personal Suck

A really interesting article from 43 Folders.

Posted by Thomas at 09:20 AM | Comments (0)

September 24, 2004

Mmm... Delicious TiddlyWiki!

My friend Dav seems to find all of the cool websites. I found this first one, del.icio.us, while reading his blog, AkuAku. Del.ico.us is a kind of central online storage place for all of your bookmarks. What's cool is that it's available from any browser anywhere you are. They call it "social bookmarks". You're able to log and categorize your bookmarks with one click ease. To use it you've got to be comfortable with the whole world having access to your browsing habits, so some discretion as to what you bookmark is probably in order. It does make for interesting browsing... (Also a nice use of .us).

One site that I can claim as having discovered on my own is TiddlyWiki. It's described as "a reusable non-linear personal web notebook". The whole concept of Wiki's is still very new to me. This seems pretty cool... though I'm still working out in my head just what the applications for something like this would be.

Posted by Thomas at 06:25 PM | Comments (0)