lifehacker.com — Fans and followers of the Getting Things Done personal productivity system have hacked all sorts of ways to GTD in different applications, from Microsoft Outlook to plain text to Gmail. But one of Google Labs' less-hyped applications, Notebook, is very well-suited to instant capture and easy processing of your GTD lists.
May 2, 2007 View in Crawl 4
dannythomasMay 2, 2007
Dope
circlefusionMay 3, 2007
Interesting. Someone was just telling me about google notebook yesterday. I usually use box.net to save notes between work and home, and I forgot to upload something from my work computer that I needed.From the google blog<a class="user" href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2006/05/note-this.html">http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2006/05/note-this.html</a>"That's why we built Google Notebook--to give you an online "notebook" where you can organize all your research, add personal notes to it, and share it with others. Google Notebook surfs along quietly with you as you browse, letting you clip and annotate whatever text, images, and links that help answer your question, all without ever leaving the webpage you're on."And the Google notebook page itself.<a class="user" href="http://www.google.com/notebook/">http://www.google.com/notebook/</a>You can access notebook data using their API<a class="user" href="http://code.google.com/apis/notebook/overview.html">http://code.google.com/apis/notebook/overview.html</a>
adamrockerMay 3, 2007
I use this for my POLITICIAN s**t LISTCategories:RIAA, MPAA, Anti-Pornography, Anti-Video Games.
baldrMay 3, 2007
One often overlook feature of notebook is the mapping feature (even overlooked by lifehacker). By putting an address within a note, notebook will notice and be able to show you it on a map (by going to Tools-> view on map). All of the addresses in the notebook are compiled and marked on this google map page (great for planning a road trip).
nicxvanMay 3, 2007
@frazier428 Notebook is awesome, however, if you do not want it, go to tools addons and disable/unistall it. Should be very easy. BTW who keeps 200 days worth of history, I clear mine almost daily.
Closed AccountMay 3, 2007
I use Mind Manager from mindjet and Ilike it a lot. MM combined with gyronix is actually much better than notebook imo.When you have gyroQ installed with MM all u have to do is type CTRL+Q and there is a little pop up that comes out. You type your idea/action and once a day you press Send Q to send everything on your mind manager map automatically
circlefusionMay 4, 2007
But...but.....this one is made by Google.THE Google;-)
zarkozyMay 4, 2007
I used to use clippings but this is better. I can export it to google docs and stuff...
lybertyMay 21, 2007
Uh.... what?
blightybabeApr 6, 2008
I have a free account at 37signal.com's Basecamp and it does me pretty good, but I am going to be implementing this now as I have really gotten in to Google Notebook of late.
dannieloMay 6, 2008
For implementing GTD you might try out this new web-based application:Gtdagenda.comYou can use it to manage your goals, projects and tasks, set next actions and contexts, use checklists, schedules and a calendar.A mobile version is available too.As with the last update, now Gtdagenda has due date for tasks (you'll see in the calendar on the right if you have tasks due today), task notes, and Email & Print support.Hope you like it.