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I recently came across Pomodoro Technique as a way to increase productivity, get in the zone, and in general feel a sense of accomplishment at setting some short programming goals and achieving them.

So far I have enjoyed it and the sense of accomplishment I get after seeing a bunch of short goals add up at the end of the day to a lot of work done on a programming project.

I'm looking for other ideas similar or not to the pomodoro technique to add a little variety to achieving goals, personal productivity, get in the programming zone, etc.

Any ideas or techniques that are expressed formally such as in the pomodoro paper, that are not trite fluffy maxims?

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I find the pomodoro technique a real good gauge setter for performance which equates to output. Mostly it boils down to just allowing the need to focus and concentrate straight away before you waste more time by pushing away all your distractions (mental and environmental). As soon as you start that timer you may feel a struggle to get set into motion, but once you roll, your efforts turn into a zone of productive and immersive focus.

Needing to really utilise the pomodoro technique - I needed a good timer, so myself and a friend have created a simple little pomodoro timer. It is a free download available at www.focusboosterapp.com

Hope it helps you too.

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Wow. I had never heard of the Pomodoro Technique. However, I have read the book "Getting Things Done" by David Allen. The bottom line principles are the same. Prioritize and break things down into smaller chunks.

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"Getting Things Done" is by David Allen, not Scott. Just in case someone was trying to look for it. – Travis B. Hartwell Jul 11 at 4:45
fixed author name – John Nolan Nov 2 at 16:41
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Pomodoro is it for me. There's a balance to be found in productivity tools, and sometimes people go overboard. Some of the people in the Cult of GTD are spending more time GTD-ing than G-ing TD!

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