B
Bernard
Guest
Is there a printable diagram of the workflow chart exactly like the one in the book. The one on DA website does not match the one in the book and I don't like the quality of photocopies.
As I read it, David very clearly said that if it was for personal use and any attribution was to David Allen, there would be no problem. The problem arises when people imply that they have some affiliation with David Allen/GTD OR that they have approval of David for something they have developed, or they are using his or their own materials for personal gain, passing off their materials as GTD/DA approved.TesTeq said:Check with David Allen Company if you can use the printouts for your purposes. In his own blog David posted the information about tightening the rules of allowable GTD uses and new strict Intellectual Property policy.
TesTeq
cyberscribe said:I've even heard of some people using the flow chart as their desktop background.
I'm a newbie, just got the book, on chp 3.peter_g said:Bernard:
At the risk of not answering your question regarding the original chart, this advanced chart is definitely worth checking out if you haven't see it yet.
http://www.davidco.com/pdfs/gtd_workflow_advanced.pdf
This chart is so cool, that I printed it in high-quality colour, laminated it, and carry it as part of my mobile "current support" file!
Regards,
Peter
guest said:in the process section it refers to '300-400 times a day'. Surely its better to process 2-3 times maximum a day
Great Idea!cyberscribe said:I've even heard of some people using the flow chart as their desktop background.
Anyone have a copy of it as a Jpeg? or file wallpaper would work with?Unregistered said:I did that for while when I was first learning/appying the methodology. Helped a lot.
Jeff K said:That's what is symbolized on the workflow diagram - keep your UCT (Ubiquitous capture tool) close at hand. It could be a notepad, a palmpilot, a voice recorder..... or a tatooing device, like the main charachter in the movie "momento".
Jeff