Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
Or so I thought. I've discovered that I have a lot more "to do" lists
than I realized. Here are some of them:
My work "to do" list,
which I keep in a Lotus Notes task list because it replicates to my
Blackberry (though it often seems to be out of sync). Each item in this
list has a clipped-together set of papers supporting it, which I carry
around in my computer back-pack.
My personal "to do"
list, which I keep in various formats, including scraps of paper and
the new Google task list which integrates with GMail.
My blog "to do" list,
which I keep in a separate GMail e-mail folder, because most
of these "to dos" originate from e-mails (e.g. updates to blogroll and
e-mail address book).
My GMail personal
e-mail inbox, which consists of (a) e-mails to which I have yet to
respond and (b) e-mails which are actually "to dos", and which should
probably be with list 3, except that they are more urgent so I want to
keep them in front of me.
My "books to buy" list
(handwritten, for when I'm in the bookstore).
My "music to buy or
download" list (handwritten, for when I'm in a CD store).
My work Lotus Notes
e-mail inbox, which consists of (a) e-mails to which I have yet to
respond and (b) e-mails which are
actually "to dos", and which should probably be with list 1, except
that the e-mail provides a lot of detail on what needs to be done, so I
can't be bothered to transcribe it to a "to do" list).
My work Lotus Notes
Calendar, which consists of both (a) scheduled work and (b) personal
appointments (I gave up keeping two separate calendars, even though
people at work now know when I'm playing poker and where I go on
vacation), and occasionally (c) times I've "blocked out" for certain
urgent or time-consuming "to dos".
Gmark Google Bookmark
"to dos"consisting of (a) links to include in my next Links of Week,
(b) links to pages I intend to read "when I have time" (i.e. never get
around to these), (c) links to pages to add to my blogroll (actually
belongs in list 3), and (d-e) links to books to buy and music to
download (actually belong to lists 5 & 6).
My blog post ideas "to
do" list, which I usually keep in (a) Nvu (html) files with notes for
future articles, but which sometimes I also keep in (b) a GMail e-mail
folder if there's an essential link or notes from a reader that
provoked the idea.
My "to read" hard copy
piles, which consist of (a) one pile of articles and magazines in my
computer backback (which I take to work), and (b) one stack of books
and personal papers by my bed.
My voice mail
"inboxes", for my work and home numbers.
Because my Lotus Notes stuff is behind the corporate firewall (and
because this stuff replicates to my Blackberry, which my employer pays
for), I continue to use Lotus Notes applications stuff (lists 1, 7 and
8) separate from my Gmail applications stuff (lists 2, 3, 4, 9 and
10b). I could manually forward all my Lotus Notes e-mails to my Gmail
account (my employer won't allow this automatically, for security
reasons), and copy everything in my Lotus Notes Calendar to a Google
Calendar that everyone could see, but this would probably take more
time than it would save.
Looking at these 12 "to do" lists, they fall into five main content
categories: messages
to process (list 3, 4ab, 7ab,
10b, 12), tasks
(list 1, 2, 5, 6, 8c, 9cde), appointments
(list 8ab), drafts
to write
(list 9a, 10a), and readings
(list 9b, 11). Is there some way to
combine these into a single list where everything is visible
in one place at one glance?
Is this more trouble than it's worth? What
is/are the best application(s) to use to achieve this?
I keep procrastinating on doing anything about this, because when I was
sick and not working 2 1/2 years ago, the problem disappeared, so I
figured that, when I retire (in the not too distant future) I won't
have to worry about it as much. But I've decided that a bit of time
management now could save me some anxiety and time in the future, so
here are my thoughts on this so far:
Google now allows you
to recharacterize an e-mail (list 3, 4ab, 10b) as a task (i.e. move it
into list 2, with a link retained to the archived e-mail that you can
refer to as necessary). GMail now also allows you to work offline (i.e.
it keeps a sync'd copy of your last three months' messages, and your
task list, on your 'home' computer), though this is still in beta. And
I can, awkwardly, access my GTasks from my Blackberry. So theoretically
I could close lists 1, 3, 4ab and 10b into list 2. But, alas, GTasks
cannot be tagged like GMails -- all tasks show up in one huge
unsortable,
unindexable list. This isn't going to help. Yes, I know there are
add-ons to Gmail and other Task apps (I've tried Remember the Milk) but
they don't allow you to recharacterize an e-mail as a task, don't work
offline and aren't accessible from my Blackberry.
I've considered using
my Calendar as my all-in-one "to do" list, by slotting all my tasks,
messages to process, drafts to write, and readings into open time slots
on the Calendar. This has the additional advantage of actually forcing
me to prioritize and set deadlines for these things. Unfortunately, as
we all know, other (usually urgent unimportant) things come along that
get done instead, so I would be spending hours rescheduling a lot of
these "to dos" again and again. This already happens with my list 1
items, which have a scheduling option that appears on my Calendar and
my Blackberry.
What I do right now is
print out lists 1, 2, 5, 6, 7 and 8 and keep them in a stack on top of
list 11a. Each morning I scan these lists and asterisk which ones I
intend to do that day. List 4 is constantly front-and-centre when I'm
online, day and night. Lists 3, 9bc, 10b, and 11b, to be honest, almost
never get looked at. Lists 9a and 10a get attention in the evening when
I work on my blog. List 12 generally gets merged into list 1 regularly.
So it seems to me that
what I'm looking for is something
that integrates task lists (lists 1, 2, 5, 6, 8c, 9cde) together into
one robust list, enables (but doesn't mandate) calendaring of tasks,
and allows messages (lists 3, 4ab, 7ab, 10b) to be recharacterized as
tasks in this integrated list, with a link back to the pertinent
message, which can then be removed from the inbox and archived. Tasks
that are calendared (list 8c) would be highlighted in the task list.
Net result -- an empty inbox at the end of each day, and one integrated
task list that, alongside your calendar, shows everything you have to
do.
Getting Things Done
application developer Eric Mack has
developed such a tool, called eproductivity,
but only for the Lotus Notes environment. It's illustrated at the top
of
this post. Each message in your inbox can be moved to an existing
project or action folder (task list entry) by dragging it to that
folder in the right
sidebar, or used to create a new
project or action
(task list entry) by dragging it to the appropriate icon in the left
sidebar. Actions (one-off, or part of projects) in the task list that
are assigned to specific dates and times are displayed in the Lotus
Notes Calendar. Some of the eproductivity functionality is accessible
on my Blackberry, though it's not clear which parts. I suppose I could
redirect all my GMail to Lotus Notes Mail to use this, but it seems a
rather convoluted solution.
So that's where I stand now. I'm going to try out eproductivity. And
I'm going to keep looking for something equivalent that works in the
GMail environment. I'm stuck with Lotus Notes at work and I like GMail
(because I can access it from any computer, and because it works with
GTalk IM and other applications that I find much more useful than
e-mail), so I'm not inclined to look at any applications that don't
build on one or the other. But I'm open-minded about it.
What works for you? Shouldn't unanswered e-mails, "to dos" and calendar
entries all be handled the
same way, with a single application? How do you 'work around' the fact
that they aren't?
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I connect with in real time, f2f, via IM, Skype or SL chat.]
- original research,surveys etc.
- original,well-crafted fiction
- great finds: resources,blogs,essays, artistic works
- news not found anywhere else
- category killers: aggregators that capture the best of many blogs/feeds, so they need not be read individually
- clever, concise political opinion consistent with their own views
- benchmarks,quantitative analysis
- personal stories,experiences,lessons learned
- first-hand accounts
- live reports from events
- insight:leading-edge thinking & novel perspectives
- short educational pieces
- relevant "aha" graphics
- great photos
- useful tools and checklists
- précis, summaries, reviews and other time-savers
- fun stuff: quizzes, self-evaluations, other interactive content
Blog writers
want to see more:
- constructive criticism, reaction, feedback
- 'thank you' comments, and why readers liked their post
- requests for future posts on specific subjects
- foundation articles: posts that writers can build on, on their own blogs
- reading lists/aggregations of material on specific, leading-edge subjects that writers can use as resource material
- wonderful examples of writing of a particular genre, that they can learn from
- comments that engender lively discussion
- guidance on how to write in the strange world of weblogs