unstuffed;45857 said:
The David says that any system should be good enough that you can use it even when you're sick. So it has to be simple, speedy, and robust.
I fully agree wtih that. And that situation is what i would call the minimal acceptable optimization level.
unstuffed;45857 said:
So for starters, my system is paper. It's simple, easy, and robust, and has no learning curve at all.
But it has serious performance and automation problems, like i said it the previous post.
In fact i never liked it solely "easy". It bores me end has a taste of ineffectivity.
Of course you can change a part of your workflow, so it takes take less stepsand lets you do more at the same time. But that's not the kind of "easy", that paper is.
unstuffed;45857 said:
To convert your style to a computey way i would do it like this:
- One file per project
- one folder per: incoming, waiting, active projects, pending, maybe
- project files go into the last 3 folders
- main folder "projects" contains all those folders plus one file for next steps (containing one line per step)
Then to advance a step i open the next steps file, remove the line, go to the active projects feolder, open the right project, cross of the old step and get the new one, paste the now one to the next steps file.
Correct?
Well... this sounds exactly like i did it and like i explained it.
But with an additional flaw:.
What happens when your project consists of 3 sets of sheets plus your project sheet (or some sheets)? Even on the pc: What happens when you got 3 files plus the project file?
You could create a folder and put them it it, then putting it in place of the sheet. This was what i did.
So the difference between yours an mine was maybe only that i had more projects with more files in my "active" folder.
And that i planned a bit more in advance, to overcome you potential second flaw:
When you work out the next step without using the project sheet and maybe even planning it in advance, you have a high rish of not thinking of many problems, slowdowns and unoptimal behaviour that could seriously hurt you.
Correct?
Could it be that i just plan a bit too much in advance to be more ptimized later PLUS have tons of projects PLUS having no chance to put enough of them on hold, that make the manual way of advancing to the next step of a project or keeping the projects in a non-optimal order (tree/list of sheets/files) so bad for me?
(I could no stand to look at sticky notes btw.
unstuffed;45857 said:
In another post, you say that you're 'proudly paper-free'. Well, a tech-based solution is not always the best: I'm an ex-software-developer, and while I love designing and building software, I also know that simplicity is the key to success with GTD, particularly for about the first six months to a year.
But there apparently are two definitions of "simple/easy". The one you like is not the one i like. The one you can work with is not tho one i can work with.
For example:
You would possibly buy a mobile media player with the least amunt of buttons and a simpe ui that would not force you to think when using it.
I on the other hand, would buy i the one with the most buttons and functions, and load the rockbox custom firmware to in, tweaked at every setting.
I like it *exactly* my way with those things, accepting complexity to get there.
You like it as easy and with the smallest learning curve as possible, accepitng that you can't have it ll then.
I respect your view. It's your optimum. Mine differs though...
I can't stand to have no choice. (Guess what OS/distribution i installed lately..
)
unstuffed;45857 said:
3) You should be able to search straight to it. If you're navigating to a directory, you're taking extra time. Try something like Yojimbo, that allows you to store and retrieve based on keywords/tags etc. You should also be able to embed links for this, and for steps 5, 6 and 7 (if I'm understanding what you're doing).
Hey, that's something i searched for, for a long time. Unfortunatley that seems no be the only one that actually allows tagging.
But yet: Does it allow relation types? Does it allow to create relations between tags? Does it have a way to grab a node, and show you the stuff "below" and "above", according to chosen relations/tags? Can you filter for tags/relations/properties? Does it even have attached properties?
Unfortunately i have no mac, so i would have a hard time testing it...
Do you now a software that can com close to it? For indows ot Linux?
I haven't found one. And i'm sproadically searching from time to time, for years ...
unstuffed;45857 said:
6) Again, navigation is something that could be done using links.
Yep. Directories are just a kind of 1:n relations missing a way to fill stuff into the 1.
links are something like relations without the typing (think relation types) but with a more exact anchor (allow you to mark the relevant part).
Why is there no software ike this in 2007?
unstuffed;45857 said:
7) I'm not clear as to why you have a 'main next steps file': could you explain, please?
It's simply what you call the NA (next actions?) sheet. I have read the german translation of the GTD-book, and there he speaks of a "next steps" ("nächste schritte") list, where all your active next actions should go.
I'm soory for not being clear on many terms. I simply don't know how they were called in the original.
unstuffed;45857 said:
And I'm with Katherine: why do you have soooo many active projects and NAs? My suggestion is to go through your projects list, and only keep as active those that you think you're likely to get something done on within the next week or so. Those that you don't think you'll work on in the next week can go in the Pending Projects, and those that you're not sure you'll ever start go in the Someday/Maybe.
*g* It's not that easy, i must tell you...
There's a difference between what i think i can do, and what i have to (must!) do.
I know that i have problems with doing more than one, maybe one point 2 tasks at once in a day or even week (depending on the tasks' size).
But if i'm not doing
at least one step/action of at least 5-10 projects
in the next week, i can go and shoot myself.
This 5-10 projects do not even include the stuff that's important to me personally. Add they contain already 25-40 tasks.
And i never have someday/maybe projects. I can decide if i want and can to realize them the moment i'm done with the brainstorming phase. Not seldom even earlier.
unstuffed;45857 said:
This keeps the complexity to a minimum, and gives you a much more realistic view of what you'll be doing during the next week.
Simple logic. I agree.
unstuffed;45857 said:
But don't expect that you're going to get something done on every single project in your project list, every week.
Hmm... i must do something on those 5-10 projects every week, no matter what i expect.
End result: Shit a'm damned.
Or for you: Kernel buffer overflow! Core dump! PANIC!