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Getting Things Done is the thing these days. While the basic principle is only about keeping a TODO list, my main concern is maintaining this list.

I tried using e-mails, calendars, mind-mapping, bug trackers, text editor, notes, paper sheet.

My problem is that all these tools are, some part of the day, far from me. Far from the eye, far from the heart. I basically forget to use my GTD tool. Funny for a tool that is intended to remind me of everything.

Do you have any advice on a GTD tool (anything from software to little white rocks in the pocket) to can help me stay focus ON the tool ?

(Please provide one suggestion per answer.)

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I've been using ThinkingRock. It has options to support the entire GTD workflow and has been really helpful in managing the process for me.

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After using Things.app for a while, I've switched back to OmniFocus. It's a hell of a lot better than it was in beta.

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Lifehacker's Five Best GTD Applications

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iPod Touch calendar. It's everywhere I need to go for work, & seeing as Outlook is standard for our office the iTunes syncing has been working without a hitch.

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I use Outlook plus a Windows Mobile Smartphone. It is far from perfect, but it solves the most pressing problem for me in that it is always close at-hand (also the original poster's most pressing problem)

Since GTD breaks down to nothing more than a calendar and a bunch of lists, I use the calendar for the calendar (obviously) and the task list for everything else. I use categories to organize the tasks ... Project, Next Action, Goal, Waiting, Errands, Someday, etc. With some minor tweaks to the standard Outlook view, this is workable.

On the phone, I have to use a 3rd party PIM since the one that comes out of the box with Windows Mobile 5 is not so hot. I use AgendaOne.

I have a colleague that accomplishes the same with TiddlyWiki and printouts to carry in his pocket.

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Backpack bar none. It is the best information manager I have used. It is simple but powerful. It allows you to use just about any GTD methodology you prefer.

One part of my philosophy is that I never use email to store important information that I need to reference often (such as Usernames/Passwords, auto information, etc). Bakpack is great for organizing snippits of organization about you car, house, or business. One of my personal favorite features is the reminders. If I need to deal with something in an email later, I just create a reminder.

Cool idea: create a greasemonky script for gmail to automatically create reminders from an email.

Notes, lists, images, files, API.

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I can't edit my post because of a StackOverflow bug, so I will do the clarification here for the moment.

I was talking about general TODO, professionally and personally. Rands'article was great but it was more focused on a professional perspective.

Sven, what you described is exactly the problem, I forget to use the tool. There must be somewhere a tool simple enough for me to remember to check it, just like I never forget to check e-mails.

I will look into Remember The Milk... Thanks.

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RememberTheMilk FogBugz Pbwiki Notepad

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OmniFocus works for me. It can sync with iCal, parses tasks from emails and works on iPhone so you can easily collect tasks. It is also highly customizable so you can implement many GTD workflows. Only for Macs though.

This is how it looks: Omnifocus

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Are you talking about todo's for code, or more generally a todo list?

for the coding part: I like to keep it simple and if there is something I have to do later on (mostly when prototyping) i just write my todo's in the codefile itself like

//TODO: insert whatever you need to do here

either in visual studio or eclipse you get a nice automated list of your todo's you can doubleclick to go straight to the item (and of course fix it, that's the idea of those todo's)

for the general todo list, I have tried keeping an agenda, but alas after a few weeks I forget or "postpone" to write my todo's and thus fail in keeping an updated list.

I think it's a curse for people like us who really need those lists: it just wont work...

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If you use a simpler system than GTD, you might find that it's easier to implement it in a way that fits into your lifestyle. I found this recent post by Rands pretty compelling. He argues that a simpler system keeps the user focused on the tasks, rather than on the tool.

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Remember the milk is a great website for task lists, being a website it is accessible anywhere (there is a mobile version of the site for phones).

http://blog.rememberthemilk.com/2008/05/guest-post-advanced-gtd-with-remember.html is a great post on their blog about how to set it up for the by the book GTD style...but it is very flexible.

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