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301
Living Room / Re: Social Media's Hidden Truth
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 07, 2011, 08:26 AM »
Weird. I had an inkling of entropy but at the time I wrote it, it didn't seem to match what I had in mind.

Isn't the heat death different from the theory of the Big Crunch and the Big Rip? (Wikipedia has an article called the Big Freeze)
302
Weird. Re-logging in with my e-mail seems to have changed the special url.

P.S. Thanks for the guys who helped gave me 5 additional entries.
303
Warning: This is probably a special url: http://appsumo.com/~6tho (I receive mine through a subjot so just in case, I didn't post that link.)

As usual, Dropbox seems to be ahead in their innovative social sharing schemes. The idea here I think is that if you use the special url and a friend of yours signs up for the lottery, you increase your odds by that friend adding another entry to your own entry. Kind of like how the free gb sharing works in the actual app but this time as a lottery towards a totally free 50gb account. (Not sure how reliable the forever is but it did say forever)
304
Living Room / Re: Social Media's Hidden Truth
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 06, 2011, 10:46 AM »
@Paul Keith: Yes, I don't know what the real issue is here, but I hope you are right - though some people might say that history would seem to indicate that you are probably on the wrong tack.

Freedom seems to be something that mankind has typically had to fight for, and generally "...you don't know what you got 'till it's gone", as the songs have it. I guess it could be cyclical. Once freedom has been obtained, the erosion of that freedom can commence. Entropy.

My take is that it's more hmm... black hole-ish. (or whatever the theory is that the universe is destroying itself to set up another big bang)

It does cycle but the cycle is towards destruction. The illusion of progress is built on the fruits of freedom that has been already obtained so every next generation of erosion is worse but at the same time less "relatively destructive". That is to say, soft fascism may analogically be "kinder" than fascism but through it's subtle qualities it makes the conversation of issues related to freedom more wedged and less about bringing forth a single concept, as it is about bringing forth a set of newer preferences transforming once revolutionary issues into an issue of spoilage and soft activities.

I suppose that I'm paranoid then.

I worry that information will be turned against people by governments and corporations.

Governments turn it around when the police subpoena information.

Corporations use it in propaganda marketing machines.

It's like being thrown in a cage with 800 lb gorillas, then seeing someone throw in clubs and tire irons for the gorillas. As if it weren't bad enough already...
-Renegade

I wasn't really using paranoia as a negative though. More of an observation of attitudes.

The problem with paranoia isn't that paranoia can't be helpful but that paranoia can be distracting. Like say a cryptographer who declares an encrypted safe because in a vacuum that data would be near impossible to crack. This doesn't mean the average person even if he educates himself on cryptography would say... know if he is being wiretapped...nor will he be perfectly protected against a false friend if he studied wiretapping.

In such a scenario, paranoia is unhelpful in the sense that it's a single issue and not an issue that if penetrated through would lead to massive reforms. As you so portrayed, your worry does not prevent what governments and corporations have already become. In such a scenario, can you really say the fundamental issue is about freedom?

Maybe you can justify it as an individual but I bet if we take a series of surveys of people as like minded as you and question them which of the two topic title they would prefer clicking "Social Media's Hidden Truth" or "Freedom's Hidden Truth" that most people (especially in a state of fatigue) would click the former not only because of the title but because inherently they know they would more likely read about something they can skim in the former topic. Social media fuels our fear but once we log out of a news site or stop wondering about Google's policy, we are most likely to go back using Google. Freedom on the other hand though? Even with Iain's examples, how many of us are archiving his words and then rereading it and then planning to use our money to do something beyond even the acts of the common patriot like leave our job entirely and battle for the education of Indonesians?
305
Living Room / Re: Social Media's Hidden Truth
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 05, 2011, 10:06 PM »
Sadly it would be much more important if indeed the issue is freedom...but it's not. What drives the issues of privacy is paranoia (to the casual person who doesn't know how all these tracking is being used and how they function) and fear (to the techie who fear that eventually they can no longer say anything in the internet that is public at all especially if it's important information)

In order for the issue to be freedom, it has to be beyond Facebook and Google but if somehow someday both companies revealed that you are even more anonymous than the rest of the internet (hypothetically for the sake of analogy) then almost everyone would celebrate and praise them and this controversy would be all over. No continuing towards the battle for freedom. No grand realization across all fronts that this should never happen again. The protesters will dissipate and the rest of the world would continue living their own lives including not caring how they are being tracked elsewhere.

306
The info on this quote is nothing new but I'm just throwing this out in case anyone's organization system have resolved some of this. Emphasis on the formatted texts.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dataspaces

Personal Information Management

The goal of Personal Information Management is to offer easy access and manipulation of all of the information on a person’s desktop, with possible extension to mobile devices, personal information on the Web, or even all the information accessed during a person’s lifetime. Recent desktop search tools are an important first step for PIM, but are limited to keyword queries. Our desktops typically contain some structured data (e.g., spreadsheets) and there are important associations between disparate items on the desktop. Hence, the next step for PIM is to allow the user to search the desktop in more meaningful ways. For example, “find the list of juniors who took my database course last quarter,” or “compute the aggregate balance of my bank accounts.” We would also like to search by association, e.g., “find the email that John sent me the day I came back from Hawaii,” or “retrieve the experiment files associated with my SIGMOD paper this year.” Finally, we would like to query about sources, e.g., “find all the papers where I acknowledged a particular grant,” “find all the experiments run by a particular student,” or “find all spreadsheets that have a variance column.”

The principles of dataspaces in play in this example are that
a PIM tool must enable accessing all the information on the desktop, and not just an explicitly or implicitly chosen subset, and while PIM often involves integrating data from multiple sources, we cannot assume users will invest the time to integrate. Instead, most of the time the system will have to provide best-effort results, and tighter integrations will be created only in cases where the benefits will clearly outweigh the investment.

Ideally something that doesn't require a new software to be implemented (unless that software already exists and is usable for anyone).

I'd also like to add that to help the last bolded text on integration, the ideas must contain some form of disorganized/organized chaos functionality like a contingency setup that can be done in an emergency.

Finally, any idea even non-software would be appreciated. I just want to compare the ideas to the idea of a personal productivity guide I'm writing and the contents of those ideas don't all include software and even starts off with paper.
307
Yeah, it's kind of iffy if you let the person "be the person" seeing as Killer Startups aren't exactly going to criticize a startup.

If you assume I misquoted it though and I was ranting...well it has everything from hints to why Facebook deserves to exist kind of like how cancer cells aren't necessarily a disease (it did save us from MySpace) and yet at the same time it's the worst virus/viral phenomenon that ever existed. MySpace didn't make people want to copy MySpace code beyond it's url. Nothing on this planet infects the world quite like Facebook. Not even 4chan's b ever did. Facebook taught Google it was ok to ask names and personal data up front. Facebook taught blogs that they should have a commenting system with little fonts and a like button. Facebook is the first ever social phenomena that knows how to teach these:

everybody and his wife switch into combative mode, denouncing Facebook for its heavy-handedness, lack of common sense and unbridled arrogance.

but also for it's own survival teaches this:

Yet, if given half the chance to implement such a change on their very own sites or blogs then they trip over themselves to do it.

...and that's the worst part about it. Facebook is good. It's simplistically innovative. It's one of the few services that have a business model and is set to force Google to come and move to them if their current social network attempt fails yet again but it's also horrible. For some reason, it teaches the web to never move on from what Facebook brings. (Oh God! Just the explanation of why that piece represents all I've ever wanted to rant about is making me rant)
308
I've always wanted to rant about Facebook but was too lazy to type it out so thankfully someone indirectly posted something I wanted to say. This is definitely not new but what the heck, anytime I can copy paste and indirectly misquote someone because they are saying something close to what I wanted to say, it's a plus:

1011590.png

You know how it goes. Facebook changes anything, and everybody and his wife switch into combative mode, denouncing Facebook for its heavy-handedness, lack of common sense and unbridled arrogance. Yet, if given half the chance to implement such a change on their very own sites or blogs then they trip over themselves to do it.

And Facebook has been particularly active the last couple of weeks, so it's only fair to assume that we're going to see lots of web apps in the days to come. Web apps, and also Wordpress themes like this one. As its name implies, it lets bloggers replicate the much-discussed timeline that Facebook will begin rolling in the days to come.

Read more: http://www.killersta...dpress#ixzz1Zn2koqxP
309
Finished Programs / Re: DONE: Pausable timer
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 04, 2011, 12:04 AM »
This would be cool if it can be implemented in some type of launcher IMO like FARR.
310
Living Room / Re: Ask DC: What am I looking at?
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 03, 2011, 08:13 AM »
It's probably in some other video or even in the voice over version since I have a hard time downloading these flash versions and ended up downloading the torrent w/ the complete series + additional voice overs (even though I had originally just wanted the flash version and had no idea Broken Saints was payware)

In one of those video, he had some basic dark on white text website with some astrological banner and that was where he kept his conspiracy files or something. The sidebar was pretty much the text in that preview link but more related to his files. I forgot the title really and it's kind of a spoiler to show the vid because a major event happens afterwards to his PC.
311
Living Room / Re: Ask DC: What am I looking at?
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 03, 2011, 05:10 AM »
Nope, that is what I'm seeing when I shared the link.

If you click on the template example link, you see something similar to Raimi's self-made secret link/site that's on his server.

Edit: Or do you mean that's not really what you're supposed to see on the site?
312
General Software Discussion / Re: New Portable Search Indexer (single .exe)
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 03, 2011, 12:52 AM »
I doubt it. At least it seems to hang up when I attempted letting it run on an external HD. Dropbox though no problem.
313
General Software Discussion / New Portable Search Indexer (single .exe)
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 02, 2011, 09:40 PM »
Source: http://www.labnol.or...p-search-tool/20147/

Source site: http://dropout.codeplex.com/#

Not sure this really needs a description or a pic. I think it may even be better if you just download it immediately.

Unlike Portable Start Menus, you just extract the program to your usb directory and it creates a portable index from there.
314
General Software Discussion / Re: list of urls to mht
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 02, 2011, 09:20 PM »
You could try the multiple Chrome extension instructions here but I dropped singlefile because it sometimes stopped working for me (but it is what introduced me to Opera's save as MHT feature)

https://chrome.googl...=search&hcp=main


SingleFile can also be used as an alternative to snapshot/screenshot/capture page extensions.

During installation the extension will ask you to install  "SingleFile Core", follow install instructions or download it from here: https://chrome.googl...jojffihnhieihhagocma

1 - Instructions
- wait until the page is fully loaded
- click on the SingleFile icon in the chrome toolbar
- alternatively you can use SingleFile entry in context menu to save the whole page or only a part of it
- wait until the shadow disappears then hit ctrl-s and save the page (make sure that "Web page, Complete" option is selected)
- all images, style sheets and frame contents are embedded into the ".htm" saved file

2 - General notes
- saved files are compatible with Firefox, Opera, Safari, Konqueror and partially with Internet Explorer 8 (see help page) *without installing any extension*
- SingleFile uses "data URI" scheme to embed image and frame contents into the page : the resulting format is not MHT/MHTML.
- right-click on SingleFile icon and select "Options" to open the options screen
- with chrome 9, archives can be automatically saved in "FileSystem" directory into chrome user profile directory : see extension help page (through Options page)

3 - More info
See the extension help in options page for more detailed information about options, technical notes and known issues.

>> Are you looking for an advanced archive manager ? Try "Scrapbook for SingleFile"
>> https://chrome.googl...mhnpkmmkpggkaefincbn

>> Do you want to save multiple tabs in a zip file ? Try "ZipTabs"
>> https://chrome.googl...gfmmkgejodommhidpjba

4 - Issues
If you find an unknown issue (i.e. frozen process, extra saved files, blank or altered document, tab crash...):
- check known issues in SingleFile help page
- reset options in SingleFile options page
- disable all other extensions to see if there is a conflict
- if there is a conflict, try to determine against which extension(s)
- report the issue here with a short description describing how to reproduce it, Chrome version, OS name and version

You can also try this Firefox extension but I haven't used it before:

http://www.labnol.or...as-mht-firefox/3896/
315
Living Room / Ask DC: What am I looking at?
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 02, 2011, 09:16 PM »
Someone posted this on subjot but I don't really get what it is. http://hackerhub.org/

The only clue I have is that the example site design reminds me of a super hacker character from Broken Saints
316
General Software Discussion / Re: Blogger has a new Dynamic View
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 02, 2011, 09:00 PM »
Here's to Google continuing to innovate and challenge the status quo rather than being the status quo themselves. (I know not everyone is probably going to be a fan of this.

They challenge the status quo ? i thought they want the traffic routed through their servers and that is why they come up with almost every web service possible. They just create competitive service to kill the business who bring the concept in the market.

Google dynamic view was created to beat tumblr as tumblr's popularity is growing charts these days. By the way what facebook has to do with blogging ?  :huh:

Timeslides/Timeline.

You don't have to be the underdog to challenge the status quo.

The key to promoting innovation is, as you said, when Google "creates" "competitive" services.

This never kills competition because, then, newer start-ups have a better idea of what has been offered and could then build upon that. This in turn builds up better services.

Not only that, this won't beat Tumblr. app has pretty much highlighted many of the problems which is why it's admirable that Google would try something like this in light of many of the obvious problems.

It's often not what the big guys are building that creates the status quo, it's when the big guys are destroying innovation whether it is from buying out services and then phasing them out, or from training consumers to settle for the same product via filling the web with clones of popular services in a blind attempt to cash in on popular competitors (The latter being what you are referring to as opposed to your initial sentence of when big businesses create "competitive" services) that Google kills innovators and innovation.

In this case, Google has the potential of opening up a key important perspective which is multiple views. Did they create this with the intention to compete with Tumblr? Irrelevant. This time unlike Google's attempt with FB clone, Google is not serving up the same dish as Tumblr. They are opening up a new thing. This time, they are competing not just cloning or stealing. This time, regardless of whether this concept may have existed before or not, Google is attempting to build a "better" Blogger (their current service with their users) rather than attempting to create something new in order to "steal" Tumblr's thunder. This time they are just as much competing via taking care of their own people (their Blogger userbase) and not simply competing via starting an argument with the next door neighbor through creating a local copycat.

Whether this new thing pans out or not is still up in the air (currently I don't see it panning out) ...but at least it's starting to compete via providing something different again by inching in on a potential new recipe rather than just trying to build a Google branded pie.

It's these attempts that have always gotten Google to where they are as opposed to the Google you describe as hating, and I think it deserves praising even more so than any other hyped up project anyone has come up with recently because the value here is not the product - it's the hopeful message that a major service like Google with all it's abilities and recent personality preference to clone and compete with other clones, still attempted this risky thing that is less of a clone and more of a concept that redefines the usage of how people consume the web with almost little benefit to them other than simply releasing that concept "in order to compete".
317
General Software Discussion / Re: Blogger has a new Dynamic View
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 02, 2011, 07:23 AM »
Not yet and unfortunately not planning to until the fog starts to clear up. (No blog post to test it out on + my drafts are on a free wordpress.com already)

I just really love that Google tried something outrageous like this. It may have come post-Facebook stupidity but for them to really "get" what true niftiness is and for this to be the first time that Google have outdone Facebook at something...I just couldn't contain myself when I first saw this post and had to share it.
318
General Software Discussion / Blogger has a new Dynamic View
« Last post by Paul Keith on October 02, 2011, 05:59 AM »

App has been telling me to switch to Blogger for awhile and I've been skeptical of Google's history to maintain abandonupdates service and was doubtful whether Google still has their interest in blogs but kudos to them for trying out something risky like this.

Especially the flip card view. When I first started out blogging, this was the theme I was hoping to find but could never nail down as far as free themes went. (although to be fair I'd prefer the flip card to at least show some meatier contents like headers, text previews, # of comments and the like but it seems this theme is often targeted towards photobloggers and so I'll just hope one day there comes a point when it's tailored more for text posts).

Already there's a commentor who praised Google for improving upon Facebook's Timeline with Timeslide. Here's to Google continuing to innovate and challenge the status quo rather than being the status quo themselves. (I know not everyone is probably going to be a fan of this. Personally it is definitely confusing on the comment detection side of things but the feature really is something that you would expect more out of Posterous than Google. It's like the world became topsy turvy.)

319
get people to donate/pay if there is no tangible benefit to them for doing so.
-mouser

This seems a little contradictory because the ware is often times the benefit.

I think it's great though that fairware is running along well. We really shouldn't rush the disagreements here in my opinion.

Eventually fairware if it continues to grow will reach a blocking point. When that time comes, then we'll see how it handles the situation.

If it's growth has been to the tune of many shareware moving over to fairware then that debunks superboyac but if hsoft shows a complete stop or almost a trickle to fairware profits then superboyac can re-chime in.

Throughout history sometimes big changes need little drops like this. I do side with your opinion mouser but I think there comes a point when the baby is thrown with the bath water when progress is staring people in the face. I wouldn't mind if people decide to advertise fairware more for now. Maybe even request some NANY makers who are on the fence to try them and see where it goes for them.

At the very least if there's a glimmer under the ground, I think it's best to dig it up as quickly and see what the whole thing is really about. Maybe the reason fairware works for hsoft is thanks to dupeguru's value but maybe there's something about the concept of fairware that just "clicks" with people and this time the burden of proof for why it doesn't work falls on the lap of the naysayers, as sound as their ideas are.
320
That's true but I think the idea has to be narrower. The problem or rather attempt of answering the question comes not just from the intent of psychology but the psychology of systems as well as the psychology of words.

The problem with psychology alone is that you have to head towards more of a design perspective. That's problematic as the idea about monoculture does not only bring forth the problem of how cultures interpret such models but how the cultures really are.

Example, in some cultures, a color means something else. The psychology has to tackle this but this is more the task of your user interface/packaging/campaign designer.

A psychology of systems on the other hand breeds forth ideas closer to conceptual frameworks and I think that's the heart of narrowing it into a much simpler question. To expand upon our perceptions of how to better the framework within each of our opinions especially in light of new views by other people.

It would be better if only I knew the official terms to describe the value of asking such a question beyond it's role as a question.

...how could I put it, umm...the question isn't basically about a relationship between the developer and the customer.

It doesn't mean that the issue doesn't exist but umm... if someone was engineering a software model, they wouldn't deal with the part about designing for the relationship between the developer and the customer at all and would instead deal with the relationship of organizing the concepts in such a manner that the new concept that comes away from it would deliver an entirely new product/mindset to the programmer/designer/seller in such a way that they can be more direct about the product to the customer rather than trying to continually rebuild relationships with them. (I'm not a software engineer so I'm being very careful with throwing this out but I couldn't avoid bringing this up what with the direction of the topic)

Some clear examples of this from a hardware perspectives are:

-Steve Jobs unveiling a thintop out of an envelope. You can make that sound better but the system behind the concept has already done most of your work

-Ipads + App Store: Many can decry how it's such a poor idea and how flawed tablets are but the combination has not only created a new platform (thanks to the new non-Apple users who demand rather than ask for the supply to be demanded) but the App Store has brought forth demand for an entirely different subset of portable games even thouigh it's not a true portable games platform nor is it a true laptop especially when games leads to other more powerful yet simple cloud based appware.

-For software, when mouser released a micro-credit forum hybrid, it shook the foundations of who are the ones that can be considered most contributing to the forum. The concept of micro-credit/micro-payments therefore did more to forward the demand/psychology of donationware than any relationship a customer has with donationware nor any programmer's desire to not only do donationware but offer it up here on this specific forum. Yet this doesn't mean it killed relationships nor made DC a monopoly for where you place your donationware. It simply meant that it changed the landscape due to the simple change in perception thanks to a modified framework leading to a modified manner of executing a concept which in turn modified the other parts in the clog of what eventually becomes the product that the customer has to have a relationship with, along with attempts to connect this relationship to the developers.
321
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: A new Humble Bundle
« Last post by Paul Keith on September 29, 2011, 05:18 AM »
You guys who have Frozen Synapse should do a Let's Play. I've heard some good concepts about the game but sadly no cash and looks like a sequel could even be better.

P.S. This video isn't a true Let's Play:

322
Living Room / Re: Seriously, Youtube is becoming impossible!
« Last post by Paul Keith on September 27, 2011, 07:41 PM »
I'm just glad they haven't figured out a way to lump their ads on my downloaded youtube videos.

323
Is exposure any relation to hormesis http://gettingstronger.org/ ??  The idea that small amounts of stress make your body respond in beneficial ways?

Nope. Different. Exposure is just that. Exposure to show how we've built up irrational fears for phobias.

@40hz:

I can't help but sometimes wonder how much more "productive" many people would be in their daily lives if they stopped worrying about productivity systems and just did some work instead?

I wouldn't. I know others would. That's why I'm obsessed with systems, sometimes people have the ability and they hold themselves back. Sometimes people don't have the ability and they could only work towards what they think they can work on & what breathes life into their everyday and sometimes the latter need actual productivity inducing ways to intentionally get out of a mindset. (instead of hoping for luck to strikes right)

If I can just be "productive" enough so that people won't accuse me of being trolls or misunderstand my words, I would probably get more done for example.

For something grander,

If I can just be "productive" and charismatic enough to change the course of politics in our country so that I don't fall into the pitfall of how politicians use their words to steer the country into the wrong way but at the same time be able to convey my hopes and desires to my fellow countrymen of clues as to where we could start changing our perception of how in a democracy/republic we citizens (no matter how smart or stupid) are the ones who are in control of our country and not as the mythology goes that only politicians have then not only do I not have to obsess over productivity but my country's overall productivity would increase due to a better economy which would lead to more money for better welfare or better opportunities for the people to be more entrepreneurial in their lives.

Of course I could work on more specific areas like speeches or law but our country neither lacks charismatic speakers nor lawyers. Great help they are. Maybe they are not as smart or strategic as other countries but they exist and they can't even give people the confidence or will to understand why a Constitution is not just a subject for them but is supposed to be for everyone and so, as an unproductive person who is just as useless if not even more useless in that area, I take the less walked route in the hopes that maybe in between the scams and the very flawed systems, I could at least find some way to push the outcome of the future closer to a place where the weak can have less barriers to stand shoulder to shoulder with the talented. The good news is that productivity systems are accessible and implementable to everyone who can read no matter how unproductive they are. The bad news is that...well, I'll let my rant below represent the bad news.

Of course the above may be hyperbole, and as I constantly say to myself whenever I wrote posts like the above: I'm at fault for not living and breathing my passions in such a way that everyday I wake up I'm doing something close to what I gave my life unto 24/7

...but I still have to claw at something. Not just for me but for future versions of people who are going to be like me. (Sorry if I said this before in this sub-forum. My passions are redundant I know.)

Unfortunately, most people I know who get too far into the "productivity" thing make me think of somebody who wanted to build a cathedral, but ended up so in love with the plans, the scaffolding, and conversing with those übercool master masons, that the church never got built.

That's not even the surface of it. I'm currently planning to include these points into the system I was writing (though I'm not sure I can write/link them word for word:

Most systems don't know how to fail well.

https://secure.wikim...n/wiki/Failing_badly

Many productivity systems though they claim to be applicable for many areas in people's lives, have a single point of failure:

Most systems asks us to be gatekeepers:

The real problem is that we don't have time to be gatekeepers, that as Clay Shirky posits the filters we've relied on to reduce the information that's out there have broken down, and we're overflowing with content to consume. How do we find the real nuggets out there without spending our days scanning RSS/Twitter/Facebook?

http://www.twistimag...the-new-gatekeepers/

Most systems don't show us how to be great finishers:

http://blogs.hbr.org..._great_finisher.html

The road to hell may or may not be paved with good intentions, but the road to failure surely is. Take a good look at the people you work with, and you'll find lots of Good Starters — individuals who want to succeed, and have promising ideas for how to make that happen. They begin each new pursuit with enthusiasm, or at the very least, a commitment to getting the job done.

And then something happens. Somewhere along the way, they lose steam. They get bogged down with other projects. They start procrastinating and miss deadlines. Their projects take forever to finish, if they get finished at all.

Does all this sound familiar? Maybe a little too familiar? If you are guilty of being a Good Starter, but a lousy finisher — at work or in your personal life — you have a very common problem. After all, David Allen's Getting Things Done wouldn't be a huge bestseller if people could easily figure out how to get things done on their own.

More than anything else, becoming a Great Finisher is about staying motivated from a project's beginning to its end. Recent research has uncovered the reason why that can be so difficult, and a simple and effective strategy you can use to keep motivation high.

The list goes on and on...

The plans? The scaffolding? That would give too much praise for the way current systems are.

Productivity systems are not even near the blueprint stage.

There's no historical contingency for when a productivity system fails like with what happened with app's experience.

No attempt at analyzing where a system failed.

Just people often saying a system is complicated and being a perfect victim for people who say they have managed to create a workable simpler system this time.

If productivity theories (even sets of ideas, and not just systems) were a drawing class... we would just be at the caveman tug of war stage where Ugg says you just need to draw a circle and Ogg says, No! You need to get a sharper stick to draw a better circle first and the Teachers are going "Here's why making the perfect circle would fulfill your life and here's how to draw a perfect circle so that you can always draw a perfect circle whenever life gives you lemons." and the notetakers and the planners are all software to make it easy for you to keep all those circles in one bag and so you have a handy circle every time you need a circle besides your problem. (Oh and bonus feature, the circle can be checked off!)

...then instead of being deliberate when the ideas fail; something that is crucial to developing and nurturing people even the talented among the populace - Many systems are so high on their own methods that they end up adopting the Law of Attraction as the contingency answer to why something may not be working for someone who deeply wants to get it to work for them (assuming they don't switch to another method)

If you believe and believe and just skim your Weekly Review list, you would finally Get Things Done.

If you believe and believe and just re-write your tasks tomorrow, you will finally Do Things Tomorrow.

If you believe and believe and just write a journal of your tasks, you will finally organize your problems.

If you believe and believe and just let a system make recurring reminders on your calendar, you will finally reach enlightenment.

If you believe and believe and just read three or less tasks today, you will finally be productive.

If you believe and believe and just note down a task and see it when you actually need to do it, you will finally get things organized.

...course no offense to the references. I'm not saying everyone will fail using them. Just that they don't have an answer for when they fail except maybe it's not for you or you're doing it wrong.

In contrast, even a cathedral, may have people inspecting and researching why things failed. No matter how ambitious a cathedral, when built, exists and when failed, would have people looking and checking at the materials.

No one's going to do that for our own implementation of personal productivity systems unless we hire someone to do it and if we have the money to hire someone, chances are we're not as incapable as we think we are. Not only that, just because a system has been built and is working, does not mean we're receiving the full benefits of the system unlike cathedrals.
324
Living Room / Re: A Religion for the 21st Century!
« Last post by Paul Keith on September 27, 2011, 12:29 PM »
zing!
325
General Software Discussion / Ifft - New Internet Auto-Posting Service
« Last post by Paul Keith on September 25, 2011, 07:16 PM »
http://ifttt.com/ via Viktor Benei's subjot

The service itself is very hard to explain. It's up there with Syphir's old interface though in terms of being user friendly.

Basically if you post something in a website, you can auto-post elsewhere.

The great part about it is that newbies don't have to create a task at all as it's possible to pre-share tasks.

I currently have the service update me on now shared tasks via Google Talk: See here: http://ifttt.com/recipes/1673

and

E-mail me when someone mentions (not dm) me on Twitter: http://ifttt.com/recipes/2668

Edit:

This looks kind of cool too. Favorite tweets instantly go to Evernote:

http://ifttt.com/recipes/2382

Edit #2:

Oops. Sorry, just saw this iftt and realized this may have been posted elsewhere here already. Nevermind this topic then:

http://ifttt.com/recipes/2470
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