43folders.com — "Must be the dawning of the new year and the chance for a fresh start, but I’ve gotten several requests from readers for an updated primer for folks who are getting started (or re-started) with Getting Things Done."
Jan 5, 2007 View in Crawl 4
germanchocolateJan 5, 2007
Does Kevin GTD? I love Diggnation and I would be interested in seeing what he uses.
Closed AccountJan 5, 2007
@chriskzooMy strategy is a combination of a few different things. I ditched my Palm Tungsten C (anybody want one in great shape for 50 bucks? :-) and went with a hipster PDA - <a class="user" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hipster_PDA">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hipster_PDA</a> using a template from the vast <a class="user" href="http://www.diyplanner.com/.">http://www.diyplanner.com/.</a> Basically, this is my mobile version of GTD. I can carry my lists, next actions, and a printed calendar everywhere I go. At home, I have my file cabinet, in box and everything set up like normal. Then, I keep my computer stuff in sort of a separate sphere (see: GTD gmail from above comment). At first I tried syncing the computer and email with my paper system, but that was just too much work. This way, I just think of them as separate spheres. But since my email is open most of the day anyway, it's never far from sight.I know it's a hack job, but that's how it turns out for most everyone. The important thing is that you do whatever works for you. Sorry for the long explanation. Hope it made sense!
Closed AccountJan 5, 2007
@anthony0Fair enough. You might be behind a proxy, perhaps? Of course, for those few people who it doesn't work for, it's pretty easy to just replace "digg" with "duggmirror" in the url.
michaelgregoireJan 20, 2007
I finally found a GTD process that I'm comfortable with. It took me a while. I ended up using the todo.sh shell script.This article pointed me out to a couple 43 folders articles that I must have had missed along the way. Thanks.