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

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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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http://www.tadalist.com/

Works from the iPhone or the Web for simple lists.

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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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Emacs with Org mode.

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

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

alt text

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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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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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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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I use MyLists as my "ubiquitous capturing tool"

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