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January 2007 Archives

January 1, 2007

GTDGmail

I'm a big Gmail fan. I switched to it quite long ago (it was still in early beta - I have a friend who works at Google). The moment I tried it I dumped Eudora and Outlook (except for work where Outlook is all but unavoidable) and moved all my personal email to Gmail. The fact that it is only available online seemed a small price to pay for the benefits (and now with Google Desktop Search you can sort-of read your email while offline).

Now GTDGmail has come along as an add-in to Gmail. It is far from the ultimate GTD plug-in. In particular, it is missing one key feature for me, the ability to defer an action until a specified date and time and then have it magically reappear in my inbox. Perhaps other people can remember to look at their Next Actions all the time but, at least for us ADDers, this is definitely a near-impossibility.

But besides this, it is actually a pretty good tool. It does a beautiful job of synergizing (not a word but should be) with one of Gmail's greatest features, labels. The different states of GTD (eg: Actions, Finished) as well as the different contexts (eg: @Home, @Work) all become labels. There is some minimal w orkflow built into the system to help you manage the relabeling. For example, when you mark something as Finished GTDGmail can be configured to remove the Action or Next Action label. It is still pretty minimal but quite useful.

One use I have of it is, via Gmail filters, to move all of my subscription emails to their own project, archive them (eg: skip the inbox), and mark them as Actions. Then, when I want to see email that I haven't read from a list, I just click on the GTDGmail provided Action link for a specific list's project and it shows me all of the emails. When I read an email and am done with it, I remove the Action label (GTDGmail provides a handy "X" next to each label an email item has that is about a billion times faster than using the "More Actions" menu) or by adding the Finished label (GTDGmail also provides a list of label links that you can just click on to add - once again about a billion times faster than the "More Actions" menu). Then, the next time I go back to the project's Actions, I have unread mail that I haven't seen and read mail that I've seen but want to come back to. If I read an email that seems important but requires more time than I have to give it (the GTD 2-minute rule) I mark it as a Next Action so I'll get to it shortly.

All this allows me to maintain my, much-desired, empty inbox. The only things that go to my inbox are emails that I don't have filters set up for (and Spam that Gmail's filter misses, of course). I can dispatch those quickly. If I ever get too far behind on one of my email lists, I simply mark the older, unread posts as Finished and just never get to them.

Even if you are not a GTD fan, GTDGmail might be worth using just for the added labeling functionalities it gives (ie: the "X" to delete a label and the list of all labels to add a label above each message you are reading). This is a big win over the existing Gmail functionality. Something I suspect the Gmail team might pick up in the future.

One drawback that I have to mention is that GTDGmail is a bit on the slow side. Whenever you click a link that causes the screen to redraw, GTDGmail adds a second or two to the redraw. Worse, the screen redraws without the GTDGmail controls and then a second or two later adds them in. This frequently causes me to click on a link just before the GTDGmail redraw occurs and to end up clicking on a different link because my link just moved. A bit of a hassle (and a deal breaker for some according to comments on the plug-in page), but worth it for me.

January 25, 2007

Keeping Your Computer Clean

Windows has a terrible problem of slowing down over time - especially the boot time. There are many reasons for this but much of it has to do with programs that add services, registry entries, file types, and such to your computer. These are almost impossible to find, trace down, confirm are unneeded, and then delete. Two other factors that lead to the computer slowing down including disk fragmentation and spyware.

Ashampoo provides a series of system utilities that seem to do a good job cleaning up your computer. They have a deinstaller that monitors installs, creates a log, and then uses the log to undo the installation. It finds all of those hidden files and registry entries that uninstallers leave on your computer. Along with this, they have a defragmenter that runs in the background constantly keeping your disk optimized. They also have a free spyware remover program. A big advantage of this over other free utilities is that you can schedule spyware scans.

All in all, they provide a good set of utilities that are easy to use, do not seem to be a major resource consumer, and are very useful. The programs all come with a free trial period. Furthermore, once you sign up for emails from the company they routinely mail you special offers that can save as much as 40% on select items or even more on bundles of software.

About January 2007

This page contains all entries posted to My Geekdom in January 2007. They are listed from oldest to newest.

December 2006 is the previous archive.

March 2007 is the next archive.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

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