10 November 2008
By Gideon
In Productivity
Well, I’m done here.
I had some vain hopes I might be able to come back to this but I don’t now, nor will likely have in the future, time to manage a blog like this. Productivity blogs are very time intensive.
Anyway, I am still writing regularly… but in a more casual way and generally about religion, if you’re interested you can check it out at Ground of Being.
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22 April 2008
By Gideon
In Productivity
For those of you who have applied to be part of our team here at Mindful Ink… I’ve not forgotten about you! It’s a very busy week for all of us so you’ll probably hear something by the end of the week, though not likely in the next few days.
But I’ve not forgotten! Thanks for your patience!
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Meta
21 April 2008
By Justin
In Productivity
If you’re constantly trying to put out fires, David Allen says in a new column, you may be ignoring the small signposts that are warning you in advance. Ubiquitous capture is a cornerstone of any successful GTD variation, and Allen says that if you’re not taking note of potential problems as they arise then they’re that much more likely to blow up in your face later on. He calls it “The Curse of the Eternally Urgent”:
I’m not talking about ignoring priorities. I am talking about capturing, deciding, and organizing action steps about everything we have our attention on, big and little. The little, unimportant things too often demand much more attention later on than they deserve, and become too important because they weren’t handled when they would have been easy.
It’s really all about the law of cause-and-effect: positive, proactive action gets positive feedback. Be aware of what’s around you, take note of what’s important or possibly problematic, and “process” it when you have the time to do so. If you do that, you’re much more likely to nip problems in the bud and avoid another crisis.
What tools do you use for ubiquitous capture? How do you keep an eye out for blowups?
The Curse of the Eternally Urgent @ Huffington Post
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Productivity
21 April 2008
By Justin
In Productivity
In the digital era, with ubiquitous grammar check & spell check, grammar nazis are so passe. The new frontier of perfectionism belongs to the self-described “typography nazis!” A new post at Receding Hairline lists and explains common typographical errors that have become convention by way of lax standards. You’d think good word processing software would catch this sort of thing, right? Wrong! Hyphenation errors are still remarkably common and “smart quotes” can still leave your work riddled with issues that would drive a typographist mad. To wit, citing “I am 5?10? tall” as an example:
So those ’straight’ quotes aren’t for proper quotes, but they represent feet and inches, right? Wrong. They’re not actually for anything. Feet and inches should be represented by primes, which look a bit like straight quotes tilted slightly to the right. If your browser supports the characters, the above statement should read: I am 5? 10? tall.
These issues may seem nitpicky, and the author seems ready to admit that they are, but if you want to stay on the bleeding edge of pedantry this is the kind of stuff you’ve got to stay up on!
Ten Typographical Mistakes Everyone Makes @ Receding Hairline
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