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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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43 Answers

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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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I personally use OmniFocus on my Mac as well as its mobile version on an iPod Touch. This way I always have a GTD-system around that I can easily sync. If want to draw something (graph, mindmap etc.) and I'm at my laptop, I use OmniGraffle and on the go I use a Moleskin notebook. So far this combination works quite nicely for me.

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Recently I started using Gmail for all my notes. Just send mail to yourself and write in subject what you need to do. If there is a lot of text, add it to mail body. Then you can label it for different contexts (work, home, today, later...). Works great so far.

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Wow, I feel archaic in comparison. I use notepad and notepad++ to keep track of my todo lists. For stuff at home, I used to use something ala notepad but with special formatting for GTD. I believe it was called TaskPaper. Very simple app, but works well.

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Wow! This whole list and no one has mentioned Tudumo? I've tried nearly all of the above and have stuck with Tudumo. Very keyboard friendly, quick, and yet powerful with contexts, tags, etc.

Bonus hint: Put it on your DropBox and you're in for synch'ed GTD goodness.

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I use Freemind for many of my information management tasks. My company also uses the typical outlook + exchange server architecture, which works quite well for me. I also use the smart bookmarks and tagging features of the new Firefox (3.x) and its intelligent address bar instead of traditional bookmarking. I hate sorting things in folders,i love search.

I use Freemind to:

  • write meeting minutes
  • sketch ideas
  • summarize papers
  • scaffold documents
  • store passwords (you can even encrypt branches!)
  • manage action items (tasks)

You can link mindmaps together very easily and you can easily link to other documents. Before i converted to Freemind i used a Wiki (TiddlyWiki) as information management. But Freemind is better suited for personal use.

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This is entirely subjective, but all I need is a moleskine:

alt text

It's overpriced, but it rules. Good build quality.

alt text

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I've been using my Palm IIIxe PDA for ToDo lists for a while now. I have the Palm Desktop app open all the time and basically use the task list as my trusted repository as advised by the GTD method. I'm still a long way from being 100% GTD compliant, but at least this allows me to capture everything.

Makes it easy to sync between my work desktop, the PDA and my home machine. If I'm away from my desk I can still easily enter information.

I'm still a bit wary of web based systems since I can never guarantee I'll be on line when a good idea strikes and I need to add it to the list.

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Emacs with Org mode.

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I have been using Jello Dashboard with Outlook 2007. Simple and sync nicely with Exchange server and my windows mobile.

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http://www.tadalist.com/

Works from the iPhone or the Web for simple lists.

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Todoist is an incredibly flexible todo list. I've also struggled with taking GTD on the move with me. At the computer, fine... I've got it licked. But when out and about, I still struggle.

I almost always have my moleskine notebook with me, but I can't seem to transfer my GTD onto paper. So I tend to use notes in my mobile and just 're-sync' when I get back to the PC. So like you, Vinent, I'm still looking for the ideal solution.

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I found this little, minimalistic, but helpful, tool: NextAction, from TimeSnapper's Leon Bambrick.

It can be useful in tracking on-the-fly notes, try it. Freeware.

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I used to use GTD Inbox, a Firefox plugin which adds GTD features to Gmail.

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I use index cards held together with a binder clip. I keep the cards and a pen in my pocket with my keys (no screen to worry about). It's always in within reach, and I never need to sync, find a wifi point, or charge batteries.

I use a card for each context / project / list. When I've filled a card, I copy the pending tasks to a new card and rip up the old one before throwing it away. It's surprisingly gratifying in a way that checkboxes on a web form just can't match :).

Keep plenty of extra index cards to take notes (capture) and process the cards when you get back home / to the office / wherever. You can also write a phone number on a card and hand it to someone, scribble a message and pass it to a coworker during a meeting, etc.

For more ideas:

Hipster PDA on Wikipedia

Hipster PDA on 43 Folders

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I would recommend Toodledo, as it has everything a good GTD system needs, and more:

  • Next items
  • Unlimited contexts
  • Unlimited folders (projects)
  • Tasks for your next actions
  • Calendar
  • Notebook entries
  • Goal management
  • Customizable booklet printout of next tasks
  • iCal integration (e.g. for showing scheduled tasks in MS Outlook / Google Calendar)
  • Jott integration
  • Google gadget available
  • File upload (up to 1GB)

With the exception of file upload, all the above is available with the free version of Toodledo! For the "Pro Plus" version, you'll get SSL connection, file upload (1 GB) and a few other cool features such as "Goal Progress" and "Scheduler". With Scheduler, you enter how much time you have right now, and Toodledo will present an optimized To-Do list that fits the available time.

Toodledo is highly customizable in terms of displayed fields, and screen layout. You can even create and save you own filtered views of next actions.

Other GTD systems (e.g. Nozbe or VitaList) offer free editions that are very limited. I'm still using the free edition of Toodledo - you can actually implement a solid GTD system with this. I do plan on upgrading to the "Pro Plus" version soon though ($29.95/year). You can try out the "Pro Plus" version for a 7 day period.

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MyLife Organized

I find MyLife Organized to be the perfect GTD companion. It is flexible enough to accommodate other systems too, not just GTD. The author is often adding new features and developing it further, so it's constantly getting better and better. The latest feature of note is dependencies, so certain tasks will only appear in your to-do list once others have been completed.

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I use Remember the Milk along with the RTM Plugin for Google Calendar.

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I use MonkeyGTD Alpha 3.0. It can easily be put on a thumb drive or used on-line from anywhere via Tiddlyspot.

MonkeyGTD is labeled as an Alpha, but it's gotten very stable over the last few months. I use it with Firefox and have not had any problems. In addition to the GTD structure, the TiddlyWiki functionality is a natural way to squirrel away useful information that's easily found later with the built-in search.

There is a learning curve, but once over it, you get hooked.

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I agree with the small notebook concept; Moleskin, spiral bound.. whatever.. i actually use graph paper so it looks funky when i draw things on it. Every other GTD / ToDo tool seems like yet another form of procrastination.

The more time you spend in these tools, the less time you have to make something awesome.

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I use outlook with the GTD plugin

Works really well to connect the inbox with notes and calendar, and everything syncs up well with my Palm device (currently a Centro.)

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Hi All

I've spent the last 5 years writing and supporting the freeware Windows task manager ToDoList. It supports hierachical task structures and exports/imports to/from a wide variety of other formats. It also runs happily off a thumbdrive and can also be coerced to running on Linux under Wine.

Check it out Here or Here.

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I also use Outlook / Onenote (desk and mobile) like @Andreas H.R. Nilsson

This link and also this can show some ways to better use those tools to better GTD :-)

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A small notebook and a pen. I use a small Moleskine. Easy to throw in a backpack, or even a pocket. It's the ultimate flexible tool.

  • To-Do lists? Check
  • Notes? Check
  • Mind mapping? Check
  • Portable? Check
  • Available offline? Check
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I use a combination of viki and vimoutliner. I haven't found a great calendar, but it's Google Calendar at the moment. I use a different Google Calendar as a tickler file.

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I like I want Sandy as a tickler; I've been playing with Tracks for the rest of GTD, but am not really happy yet.

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For ubiquitous capture, I couldn't live without the voice memo feature on my phone. (I use CallRec on my PalmOS Treo, but I'm sure similar applications exist for non-ridiculously old OSes.) I set it up on a whim, but once I set up a recurring daily task in my task manager to remind me to actually transcribe the notes it really made my system click. Double-clicking the side button on my Treo and dictating the task I want to get into my system is faster and easier than any other method I had tried previously.

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I use MyLists as my "ubiquitous capturing tool"

alt text

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Have you tried Vitalist? It feels like RTM but geared toward GTD. The only thing I don't like about it is that the default reminder time is 12:00am, my wife almost killed me after the 3rd or 4th time. I loved RTM (Lists = Projects, tags = {next action, tickler, someday, etc.}, location = context), but I ended up not being able to view the data the way I wanted to.

  • I use Evernote for research or reference material.
  • gmail as my inbox (texting notes and todo's to myself while on the run). Vitalist also has on inbox, but I find myself not checking it as much.
  • Finally, I use google calendar, for important ticklers or appointments (creates some double entry with my corporate system, but it's worth it)
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Going digital

  • Microsoft OneNote
  • Microsoft Outlook
  • Mobile

I've tried tons of applications that could host an Inbox, an Action list, a Projects list, a Reference system and a Tickler file all in one. The best system I could find was one with the above tools.

Before turning to OneNote I tried a lot of different systems on the web for this kind of thing. But the web being the web, it just doesn't fit for easy and quick additions/edits/removes. Being able to access the system from "anywhere" (at least from any pc) didn't matter that much, I found out, when the friction of adding to the system just detered me from even using it.

OneNote allows for extremely easy insertion of what ever data you want (text, pictures, files, links, ...). The organization can both be free form and very structural. My inbox is completely free form, I'm just tossing stuff in there. The Projects, Reference list and Tickler file has rigid structure.

The tickler file system is built as a list in OneNote. Every item is a Task, that when created automatically links to Outlook (when editing or removing in OneNote and vice versa, this is reflected in the other program). Outlook is in turn synchronized with my mobile phone on a regular basis. That way I can see (and edit) my tickler system as a list in OneNote, I'm notified as a reminder via Outlook, and be it I'm not at the computer, my mobile will inform me as well.

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