Never Forget Where You Parked!
Tuesday, January 6th, 2009Grab your cellphone if it has a camera.
Take a picture of your location after you park.
Especially useful in multi-level garages.
Previously, I introduced my coworkers to web standards and usability design. My new goal is to make sure they incorporate that into every project.
Grab your cellphone if it has a camera.
Take a picture of your location after you park.
Especially useful in multi-level garages.
A short follow-up to the To Do list article.
Cooper (an interaction design firm) has some interesting ideas on email in-boxes.

Trouble keeping yourself organized?
A new system may seem great at first, but one day you realize that you haven’t used it in weeks.
These have been my excuses:
Here’s a system that hasn’t let me down.
It uses Gmail, the GTD plug-in for Firefox, and optionally, Google Calendar.
Here’s what you do:
Worried about keeping work mail separate from personal mail? It’s under control. With a single click, you can view all the messages from your work email account without seeing any of your personal messages.
You’ll also label every message as either “Action”, “Next Action”, “Someday”, etc… These labels tell you how urgent a task is. Learn more from the GTD walk through once you install the program.
One-click viewing of Work To Do or Home To Do
Use Gmail’s QuickView feature to create one-click access to certain labels. For instance, if I want to have one click access to messages labeled “Home” and also labeled “Action” or “Next Action”, I just do a search for “label:Home (label:Action | label:Next-Action)”. Create a new QuickView (you may have to turn on QuickView in settings) and use that search string as the input. I name the QuickView “Home To Do”. Now I just click “Home To Do” in the Gmail sidebar, and everything I want to do after work that day pops up.
What does this mean? Your Gmail window can be your To Do list, and any upcoming events in your calendar can be added to your that do list, all in one web page, accessible from anywhere in the world, whether it’s for work, for home, freelance jobs, or anything else. You can keep using all your old systems if you want (although, I don’t know why you’d need to).
I don’t mean to promote Google too much. There are lots of good systems out there that work fine. I’ve tried some that I’ve liked, but I always find myself not sticking with them. Using Gmail, Google Calendar, and the Firefox GTD add-on, everything I need is in a place that I already check at least once a day, my email. I can’t forget about my To Do list.
The result? I’m getting more done in less time. Accidentally waiting until the last minute to do something because I forgot about it is a thing of the past. As soon as I get an email, I use GTD to help me label it and add it to my list. If it’s a personal email, I read it an archive it or a label it “Home” and check all my “Home” messages after work. My INBOX is clean. I can easily check my schedule.
You can even use your cellphone to text Google Calendar and it will send you back upcoming events. It doesn’t get much more convenient.