Do you travel with your laptop anywhere you go? In commuting?
Do you already have a perfect backup system of you computer?
Do you have a printer close to your computer so that you can print out
some/all of your notes instantly?
What about your mobile device? Cell phones? Or "smart" phones?
BlackBerry? iPhone? Does your digital system work seamlessly with your
mobile device?
In your email subject "Digital or paper", have you considered the option "Both"?
I can only give you a hint... I use Macs so I can't help you very well.
I don't use OneNote, but I do transfer a lot of my notes digital.
Makes it easier to search and sort when I need too.
I do both. I stay digital for 90% of GTD. Notes, and new
tasks/appointments get written down in my notebook. then get
transferred over, most of the time.
If something comes in via email, or while I'm near a computer I do it.
I use a project planner for big projects.
Then I go tired of it all... none of the online stuff worked the way I
wanted.. so I'm writing my own. Early Beta. I've got a round of bugs
to fix, this weekend and if you're
interested, I'll shoot folks the link and a ticket to get it.
> >
>
--
James A Barrows
One of the things that I've noticed about implementing GTD, is that it
lends itself to analysis paralysis. If you look at a lot of the posts
here, and on the david allen site,
you see a LOT of what's best posts. The advice is almost always the
same.. what works best for the folks replying. Which leads me to one
conclusion about GTD... You cant
Think Things Done, you have to Get Things Done. Or, more doing, less thinking.
Being an engineer, and a software developer by hobby as well.... It's
kind of like pulling teeth.. but I do a lot more just do it, then
tinker with the system.. :)
--
James A Barrows
Yes, I think so, only because you feel the need to ask the question.
Or you're not automating enough. Depending on your point of view. If
you keep each projects tasks with the project, and only transfer the
tasks you need to the "in your face" list, that can keep management
down. Don't manage tasks, manage your time. Figure out what you can
get done, and do those. The lists just help you figure that out.
Another way to look at it.. getting things done is about being lazy.
The lazier you are, the more you will get done.
--
James A Barrows
Yepper.
>
> OR do I update a list of next actions and see which of those I can do at any
> given time?
I do that in the morning. I look at my schedule, my task lists and
transfer what I can do to my "Today list'. Actually, my task manager
does most of that for me. I just have to print it out if I need to.
It's also available via my PDA for access. Which I do depends on
where I'll be ( ie out of cell), and mood.
99.99% of the time this takes me 10 minutes at most. When it's longer
then 10 minutes it's because I have to juggle schedule and tasks
because of the unexpected, deadlines or size of the tasks.
If I'm overly pessimisitic about my time, I go looking at my other
lists to fill in. HOWEVER, the point of GTD is to give you more free
time, not fill in every waking moment with something to do. So, I
usually reward myself with something fun and non-productive. This
does require a degree of honesty with yourself. If you're going to
sandbag your list, admit it. If you're going to over commit, admit
it.
>
> I guess figuring out how to create/manage NA lists is the biggest piece of
> the puzzle
Nah. The workflow diagrams in the book and on the website have
already done that :)
--
James A Barrows
It acts like a box of time. You put everything you need in it, and
take it with you. When someone asks for something urgent, you can
look in your box, and see if you have time for the urgent, and
determine if it's more important then what's in the box. It allows
you to have everything you need in one place to see if you need to
take something out of your box to put something else in.
It also acts like a detailed checklist. Let's say the project is
planning a party. The task is "Go Shopping for food". That's what's
on your project plan. We all know that this is going to get expanded.
So, you've already figured out the theme, you know what dishes to
prepare, so the "Go Shopping" task gets expanded on the NA list to:
1) Review Recipes and see what's in the pantry.
2) Make shopping list of things I don't have.
3) Check paper for coupons for all items needed.
4) Plan shopping trip.
Okay, you can't really do more on 3 & 4 right now.. you don't know
what stores you need to go to, or what stores have the best prices.
That will have to wait until later, and you have more information to
complete those.
Now, you're in the super market, and you meet Bob, Bob wants to go to
lunch and talk about something. You look in your time box (NA List),
and realize that you only have one more store to go to, and and the
restaurant is on the way, so yeah it fits in your box. Or, it
doesn't, you can tell Bob, sorry, I have too much to do today.
So, in the first instance it keeps you from having to detail every
step in a project plan to the last task. You can simply put as tasks
simple, easily understood tasks, without a lot of detail. That makes
project planning easier. It also means you put off some decisions
until you have more information. it can also keep you from having to
make the same decision twice.
Let's say that you have your party project all planned out in advance.
The food will be Mexican, and you've planned this out 3 weeks in
advance. The night before you go shopping, you're wife makes Mexican.
You don't really notice that all of the ingredients you thought had.
Now you have to make the decisions of what go shopping for AGAIN. Not
good. Not a disaster, not anywhere near a catastrophe, but
nonetheless.. a time waster.
--
James A Barrows
I don't date mine. When the page gets to be a PITA to read, I
re-print or re-do it. It's lazier. Then again my
organizer is not pre-printed in any way, so it doesn't matter. If
you're using one of the preprinted ones, that's great.
And to your comments below.. sure.. that works :)
--
James A Barrows