This is so true and I know it’s being put all over the web/twitter right now, but I can’t help but to spread the wealth to those that may not have seen this. http://theoatmeal.com/comics/design_hell
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I personally hate it. But it does serve a good time to listen to some tunes and plan out the day. GTD happens anywhere and when practiced, everywhere.
I try to think about the next tasks that will take my morning so I can get right to it when I get in. I also use this opportunity to listen back on my Evernote voice recordings and even brainstorm ideas on projects. Bottomline here is we all are busy and get pulled in a hundred different ways all day, cease those times during the day when it’s just you with little or no distractions to get things done.Posted via email from Jason Resnick’s posterous | Comment »
Zero Inbox — one of the great accomplishments of any productive day. I’m a big fan of the Zero Inbox methodology. The theory in a nutshell is when you process your email, read the email and think of “what do I need to do with this email?” If it’s something that can be answered right away (less than 2 minutes), then reply directly and then archive the email. If it’s something that I need to look something up, talk to someone else about it, or would just take too long to reply back, then I mark it with a date to process later and archive it. If it’s something like a response to a question that I had for someone, an advertisement, or just something that I don’t need to deal with, then I just mark it with a keyword and archive it.
The idea here is to clean out your inbox, and then when you come to your review of your tasks for the day, you will be able to see what emails need addressing at that time. Before I adopted this method, I found that there would be a few emails that would slip through the cracks. Someone would inevitably call me asking about something that was referred to in an email 2 weeks ago. Then I’d be stuck, because I knew I read it, just forgot about it because something else came up. With this method, each and every email gets dealt with in its own way. I will go into this with more detail later, but if anyone has any questions on this, feel free to ask. It’s something that has totally changed the way I handle my email and just makes things SO much easier.Posted via email from Jason Resnick’s posterous | Comment »
Ok - so I’ve got my invite. I signed up. Watched the introductory videos. Started a new wave. But who to share it with?? I don’t think I have any invites to anyone else that I know. If I do, I don’t know how to send them out :(. Anyone out there????
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Ever feel as though things just aren’t going your way, or you are having a string of bad luck, or that you are having a rough week? Anyone who knows me, knows that I’ve been at times a pretty pessimistic type of person. But I’ve been trying to stay positive lately, just seems to be hard when things continue to go in a down direction for a period of time. This seems to be true in sports, relationships, even just in pure everyday tasks like getting your car fixed for one thing, then 2 days later, something else goes wrong. How does one stay positive?
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I guess there always comes a time when good things come to an end. Yahoo announced that Geocities will be turning the switch off permanently on October 26th. It’s been a long ride for the free web host. Starting back in the mid-90s, pretty much at the advent of the internet as we know it. My first site we a Geocities site, and from reading the article, it makes me wonder why I haven’t kept that first site. Oh yeah, I remember now, because it was horrible :) - animated Simpsons characters, horizontal rules that were yellow and black construction type signs, an “LED” Welcome sign, all center aligned. At the time I loved it and spent a lot of time on it when I should’ve been in economics class, and was proud to have my little place on the web.
Anyway, thank you to Yahoo for keeping the “first apartment” alive and well these past several years. But we all need to move out and move on with our lives as you do as well. Goodbye and Farewell Geocities, it was great while it lasted.Posted via email from Jason Resnick’s posterous | Comment »