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551
Living Room / Re: Too many facebook friends linked to anxiety
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 20, 2011, 09:56 PM »
Ahh yes, I thought you meant some other things like social causes. Thought you were rallying an army of donation coders.  :P
552
Source + Concept Art: http://thenextweb.co...ing-chromes-url-bar/

There are two big reported possible changes planned to take place. The first and most significant UI change comes in the the removal of URL bar. The second is the ability to use multiple user profiles in parallel.

Sigh... another sad reminder of how Opera does this things first, ignores demand and now Chrome can potentially re-market and re-design the concept.

Btw Opera's design isn't as ambitious but it's certainly more user friendly. You could eliminate the address bar and if I'm not mistaken there was a way to enable that toolbar via hotkey but the more major one was to simply remove the bar and hit F2 to show a pop-up address bar.
553
Skwire made Anuran so there's one already.

mouser also has PopUp Wisdom.

App has AnotherOneDone - a points based focus system and InstantBoss - a pomodoro like timer.

There's a Do or Delete program in one of the software directories.

Hell, you've done games yourself: http://timns.dcmembers.com/

I'm sorry if I'm being facetious but IMO it's alot harder to make a logic puzzle than to induce gamification. Up to this day, I still don't get sudoku despite reading some walkthroughs and seeing solvers.

You could take a cue from subliminal messages and WorkRave for example and combine blobbies with a countdown timer and a to-do list. The game concept being that it acts like a virtual pet. Your pet will only grow if you rest when that program pops up until the countdown timer shuts off. Similarly, the more you cancel the program - the more your pet dies. In terms of where the to do aspect lies - after the countdown is over, the task name is revealed and you can accept that/type a new task or switch to another task. if your pet dies - you must copy paste the task out of the program with the message warning you that you should put this in say a someday/maybe list and that you can't continue with the program unless you do so. (basically it just records if the action select text + ctrl x then ctrl v occurs)

For the volume meter, you could combine it with Skwire's Barbecue and have a progress meter that shows certain tasks only if it's set at a certain percentage. Like say... at 25% it will show only tasks (with progress bars) that you set to show at 25% and then when you slide to 100% - it will only show you tasks you've set to 100%. The idea being that you gain exp based on how much you've done a set amount of tasks that total to 100 in a set time chosen by the user. (i.e. 100% total in 24 hours = instant level-up for the first few levels and then it gets harder and harder after that)

For the logic puzzles, I really don't know logic, but you could do something like a reverse Goalscape. Instead of trying to increase the size of a circle, think of it like injecting tasks to build up a strong central frame. Say... organize each tentacle of a circle by estimated priorities and value kind of like Sudoku then the user must guess their own steps correctly by checking the actions in order. Worst case scenario, it doesn't motivate them to use it as a to-do list but it challenges the more logical among them to self-evaluate how good their outline is. Best case scenario, it trains them to act sequentially in a project.

I know it's a whole lot easier to state ideas than make them especially since I don't have the context of how difficult it is to make these apps nor am I exactly sharing best seller ideas that would guarantee it would increase someone's productivity but come on, you guys don't need interest. You are programmers. You've already unlocked the mindset of knowing you can spend time building something you want and there's a good chance you'll find you've built it or you lost interest. Interest are for us guys who can't make these on our own.  :P (Not even in our theoretical assumptions because we have no idea how codes look like.)

The bigger picture of why I'm saying this though is to emphasize how gamification is not a rigid category like developing a PIM or a timer or a Notetaker or a set of macro commands. It is purely a mindset preference, no different from making a windows app look like a mac app because you like seeing it that way. You don't have to be interested in gamification as much as you gamify what it is that you are interested in building in the first place. Sorry if this last paragraph is nothing profound. I just feel it needs emphasizing. (Note that this doesn't mean your gamified program isn't exempt from being judged as a poor game or poor program i.e. mouser makes a tower defense game where the enemies are tasks in a to-do list. It doesn't mean that if it plays like one of the best tower defense games it has succeeded in improving the motivation one has to completing their to-do list. Therefore it may get tons of praise and even be a hit as a paid program but it's still a failure as far as gamifying the program.)
554
Forgot to add this. http://www.readwrite...erence-between-g.php

That problem being that gamification isn't gamification at all. What we're currently terming gamification is in fact the process of taking the thing that is least essential to games and representing it as the core of the experience. Points and badges have no closer a relationship to games than they do to websites and fitness apps and loyalty cards. They're great tools for communicating progress and acknowledging effort, but neither points nor badges in any way constitute a game.

Paul, this is great stuff. Thanks for the links

No prob. Hopefully someone else could add more to these examples. I have ton of other examples but sadly no knowledge of a released examples for some of my thoughts and no knowledge on how to code them.
555
General Software Discussion / IMetaSearch on Bits Du Jour
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 20, 2011, 11:43 AM »
http://www.bitsdujou...oftware/imetasearch/

Didn't try but I thought you guys might want to know since many of you have problems with Google.

In other news, EA seemed to have screwed the Bits du Jour users. Judging by the comments, I think Sims 2 is supposed to be offered for free (0%) but it's only at 40% discount.
556
Living Room / Why Simple is better Security than Several
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 20, 2011, 11:16 AM »
Couldn't find that topic where mouser was considering changing DC's login forms so I'm making a new thread.

http://news.ycombina....com/item?id=2242140

StackOverflow should change absolutely nothing about their login process. It is perfect. I anonymously answered one question, and all of a sudden I have a profile. No confirmation e-mail, no Facebook or Twitter crap. Just use the site and bam! you're registered. It remembers me every time I come back and it makes absolutely no fucking attempt to worm its way into my social graph.

The key is to social engineer users into making a difficult pass phrase and adding extra security AFTER they have an account.
557
Gamification or Game-based marketing is the new buzzword right now as exemplified by Facebook social games like Farmvilla or blogs like Mashable Follow.

Here's several concepts that have been done for productivity systems already.

Screenshots:

Chore Wars (browser)

642956-220201161937pm.png

Progress Quest (Browser/Windows Desktop/IPad) - Game addiction saver

385337-220201163156pm.png

Destruct-o-matic - (browser) Although there are lots of point based habit trackers, this one is the closest thing to really capturing what it means by gamification as opposed to rewards-based systems.

738558-220201165547pm.png

AskCourageWolf (Also on Facebook)

80515-222201145343am.png

Slot Machine Personality Quiz - Uses bias bypassing concepts like cards rather than quizzes to obscure cheating.

Poker Personality.png

E-mail game (Inbox Zero Read or Die type game)

AnnotationMenuBar.png

Videos:

Epic Win (Iphone)



Noborizaka (Windows Phone 7)



Half a Minute Hero (PSP)



GTD+R - Adding colored labels to GTD Index Card type systems From: Necro DIYPlanner Topic



Links:

Free Rice (browser) - charity enhancer (note that this have been gamed already and you're not giving as much as those guys who used automation programs for this)

3rd world farmer (browser) - empathy builder (notable for being closest to Farmville's concept)

750 words (browser) - writing (although there are other writing games this one is notable for having a leaderboard)

Anuran - Not posting a screenshot cause it's deceptive. This one needs to be heard to be understood.

Google's Fashion Engine based on Like.com: image comparison engine

http://www.luxist.co...gles-fashion-engine/

What kind of a Teacher are you? (Needs Facebook to test) - Results don't just show results but link directly to advises.

http://www.facebook....p?id=154514724570539

Free Leech:

Free leech means that what you download will not be counted. It is a way to build up your ratio at the site.

Most private sites will still enforce their hit and run rules on those torrents. Usually it is seed for 72 hours or until 1:1 ratio.

So don't download and not upload on those as that could get you into trouble there.
558
3 words:

Unblock vs. Know

3 sentences:

Spoiler
Problem GTD addresses - What's blocking you from doing this? (This is not talking about making next actions, weekly reviews or processing stage)

Core of Lite versions (ZTD/softwares based on GTD/other simple systems mimicking GTD) - What, why, when, how do I know what to do with my list?


3 paragraphs: (Long, skippable)

Spoiler
Reason for making this: That other thread may be too long and it goes deeper into the theories which may further the myth that GTD is somehow complex plus many might not still realize why other copies based on GTD may seem more appealing, explainable and attainable to the productivity crowd.

GTD is easier to explain. It's a lot redundant to explain it in easier words because then it just sounds like an average productivity blog article telling you to ask the same question. However that's the core of why fans keep saying it just works if you follow it/it just works if you follow it/it just works if you follow it.

The less things that are blocking you, i.e. the less fear you have of touching your to-do list, the less the system works and the more it seems like the system is working but in reality users just switched what format they want their outline or to-do list to be shown. This doesn't mean the opposite is the same. The more things are blocking you, the more GTD won't seem to work on it's own unless a consultant forces you to follow it's process through. This doesn't mean "you don't get it". It just means it's a system based around a consultation service as it's made by a consultant. There's no way of over-simplifying this concept alone further other than this without going back to the separate concepts and making this sound like the other threads I made about GTD. (although there's obviously a better way to present this but I don't know how). One good way to figure this out though is to look at any of your bookmarks. This must assume you have tons of browser bookmarks. How do you expect to organize those bookmarks and read them all? Answer, most of you probably don't but you think you're becoming more organized anyways by setting it with tags and folders. That's what the lite copies of GTD are claiming to simplify GTD as. Bookmarks where the lite copies would pretend to be ReadItLater Single Folder bookmarks. If you plan to read those bookmarks anyway and are already organized and disciplined, it works, since the next action is just a click but that's it. GTD on the other hand aims for you to read all those bookmarks whether you like it or not. I'm not saying the system doesn't try to play around with you but bottomline - it forces you to take action on them all whether it be the delete button or the read button, no exceptions including no Someday/Maybe folders or Next Item folder. It doesn't mean it has to be at that exact moment but think of it like someone having replied to your post in the forums. You either ignore it forever or you reply as if you have an internal timer even though there's no consequence. (Other than the other stranger thinking you ran away if both of you are having an argument.)

559
Living Room / Re: 70% of Local Businesses Use Facebook For Marketing
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 20, 2011, 05:09 AM »
Actually I knew that (hence the bowing down to the Borg joke). Although when I search for it on Facebook, all I got was this so there was also that nagging doubt that maybe I was mistaken: http://www.facebook....oder/106040069436740

To expand on what I mean, I'm talking about things like having an Ecwid interface for DonationWare instead of just a List.

Example: http://www.facebook....?sk=app_251458316228

App: http://www.facebook....om/EcwidShoppingCart

A Twitter app feed specifically for Facebook containing the new apps.

A Facebook Social game where you manage someone who uses DC apps in their world to improve their stats.

A way to share your forum thread directly to the DC Discussion page.

A DonationWare causes page thing. http://www.facebook....es?sk=app_2318966938

A how much do you understand DonationWare quiz thing: http://www.facebook....5383700&ref=appd

A humorous daily quote app based on the books in PopUp Wisdom: http://www.facebook....550154316&v=wall

...I'm overthinking this aren't I?



560
More pages should add this:

Can I enter a fake email address to register?

Sure. Actually, you don't need to enter an email address at all. You can just enter a desired username instead if you want, but you will never be able to recover your account if you forget your password and didn't enter a valid email address.

Still: the site really needs a free interactive demo but thanks for the link.
561
Living Room / 70% of Local Businesses Use Facebook For Marketing
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 20, 2011, 03:24 AM »
Source: http://www.readwrite...ok-for-marketing.php

P.S. Link is not worth clicking as the news is in the title unless you want to check out the source.

The real question is: Would DC join Facebook or not?

Not so much as a page or a member but as a concept bowing down to the Borg be it from forking certain DC apps into Facebook as Facebook apps to having a causes link for DonationWare to showing in the homepage how many friends like DC to having a gallery full of Cody pics from all angles.
562
The Getting Organized Experiment of 2009 / Re: Quick Quote: GTD vs. GOE
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 20, 2011, 01:00 AM »
While your motivation can be appreciated, I'm a bit questionable 'bout your source - especially that quote

Sorry, I'm a little bit confused. I understand the general theme of your reply but I don't really get what you mean by questionable source. David Allen authored Ready for Anything.

The reason why GOE and GTD's relationship is notable is due to the fact that GOE (at least the records in the 2006 sub-forum since I wasn't here from the beginning) is largely based on the idea of experimenting on ways to get organized with GTD being one of it's primary assigned systems not just in some of the assignments but also in how Mark Forster and David Allen are the biggest names DC has interviewed in terms of people that represent the symbol of GOE: https://www.donationcoder.com/podcast/

P.S. Thanks for pointing that out. Maybe you could post the correct context in your next reply.

No preached methodology is appropriate to all, sometimes not even to the author - that person is selling the methodology, not necessarily living it.

This is a much bigger question worthy of it's own thread. If you don't mind I would like to create a separate thread addressing this above issue.
563
Living Room / Re: Too many facebook friends linked to anxiety
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 19, 2011, 11:30 PM »
"recruit" people?
564
Disagreeing but also supplementing how I used to think like you are in the past. (but not all of it)

Also you could say I'm trying to raise questions without asking questions. (minus that one question in my reply)

So basically, all of the above -1.

Mostly though I'm responding more than commenting but it can be kind of rude to respond to a 2cents and then disagree so I'm also mostly just sharing my 2 cents of your 2 cents in case a reader might need to read that kind of perspective.
565
GTD is sort of a single insight technique. Once you grok what it's saying, (and possibly incorporate its techniques where appropriate) there's only so much else you can say about it before you start repeating things.

I think that's one of the underlying lies of GTD. It's not that we all don't do that but we all do that to all things we do especially those that have a large impact in our lives like a productivity system.

Speaking strictly of Allen's way of repeating the books, it's not that there isn't much to say as much as he's repeating things that people still aren't doing and yet the more he repeats it, the more it becomes less practical and clear because he's not really expanding the system anymore as much as he's constantly recreating the same thesis over and over again...and it still sells because lots of people still don't get "it" so he gets to have the luxury of writing books under the illusions of "why" so that he can recreate the same original problem of people not getting "it" and "why".

I apologize if this sounds redundant but think of it like this: It's one way to go into a forum and discuss which is the best antivirus everytime a new Antivirus goes out and then re-repeat the same quality antivirus that is still the best. That is much closer to what you are saying.

However the reason why GTD's concept is re-buried is that, it isn't the current case (at least for most of the surface discussion and implementation of GTD)

It's more like you helping a person install a security system like an Antivirus and all they have to do is have a weekly updated AV scan and then they don't do that. Is it really valid for them to accuse you of repeating the same advise of doing a weekly scan? More importantly is it really helping them to have this kind of mindset especially when the time comes and their PC finally gets infected?

My only objection to GTD is that, for many people, it becomes an end in itself. It clears space and mind to do something. But many times, GTD advocates can't seem to get beyond cataloguing and planning what they want to do.

I used to think this too. However on further analysis, and you'll mostly see this evidence in the Weekly Review interview series, GTD relies on GTD consultants.

It's one of it's biggest flaws. If you can't seem to get beyond cataloguing and planning using a GTD system, it's because you need someone to tell you to go beyond that. However, most people either don't have that or don't have that right person who understands GTD to tell them to do that.

It's not really complicated but you need someone to tell you, ok - if this is a bad time to do a weekly review: this is the best time to do a weekly review. If you only have 10 min. - let's do this in 10.

It's also ironic. GTD is supposed to be an end in itself and that it's reality. However because of the fantasy of the table of contents portrayal of next actions/contexts/weekly reviews and most importantly "a system that you can trust" and "a personal workspace of your own" the end of GTD becomes twisted into something that's not an end to itself and then when you and I gets exposed to that, we sort of get the tendency that what they are doing wrong is because they think it's an end to itself. Kind of confusing.

Think of it like ehh...Christianity. The end of Christianity is supposed to be follow and spread God's Words. Yet the end of Christianity is also supposed to be "Go to Heaven" "Be charitable" "Convert people to your religion" and then that latter way of thinking is what makes certain people become atheists and agnostics in the sense that they not only don't like that Christians think those latter views are an end to itself but they see that such views are contrary to a developing world and are flaws of a cult-like entity that has permeated towards the global culture of their surroundings.

It's the "doing" part that is the problem for most people. Because once lack of focus and scheduling issues are resolved, the only thing that still remains to hold someone back from "getting things done" is fear and inertia.

Again, the irony of it here is that GTD is supposed to be about fear and inertia more than about scheduling and focus.

It's crazy but because I have a better respect now of certain productivity methods (not for GTD only) on how focus and schedules work - it's much easier to see where GTD is really going about.

In fact Allen could have done something about this in Making it All Work but he basically strawmaned everyone as knowing how to use a calendar and why scheduling is flawed.

It's one of the things that made me smile in that I don't know how to make a calendar work. It's one thing for me to put one or two upcoming items but the way he's talking about calendars - it gives an insight to the environment he is working with and with that comes a clearer view of where his systems' true flaws are. (This is assuming Allen isn't just milking GTD nowadays for his consultation services)

I thing the Buddah may have had something to say about that.

Again, I keep repeating myself and I apologize but it is one of the more ironic things yet again.

GTD IS trying to be Buddhism in the corporate world. It might not be 1 to 1 accurate but it's still alot closer than what most people's idea of GTD is.

Hell, Wikipedia can't even figure out that GTD is not a time management system. (This isn't to say Wikipedia is credible but it just means that the myth of GTD is very inserted into it's followers)

Much like all the other thinker-toys, GTD can save you - or bury you alive if you can't get beyond it.

None of either unfortunately - at least at this point of my thinking. I would have agreed with you originally but the more I look at what I know about it's flaws and the more I look now at what it's strengths and innovations are to productivity the more GTD is just a more compact version of Forster's system. Almost concept for concept even.

Next Action is a sequence for sequence rather than a daily Do It Tomorrow. Sounds kinda obvious in terms of the terms' definition but in terms of the meat of the concept it's a lot like meditation in that you can sit silently in a corner and that's meditation but then you can do a bunch of other stuff and heighten that meditation but all that is worthless if your meditation doesn't bring you much closer towards a mindset of peace as opposed to just a calming exercise that will fail when someone is trying to swing a metal bat to your head.

Similar in terms to how it buries you. It's the core reason why I recommend Getting Things Done Fast and the Weekly Review interviews.

Listening to those things won't save you but I think those two (with Weekly Review being the clearer at emphasizing this for that one GTD concept) will show how to "un-bury" GTD by basically just expanding on "not the why" but the "what" of each of GTD's concepts.

Sigh...again it sounds redundant and I don't know how to explain it without focusing on one concept of GTD only rather than talking about GTD as a whole but most of the confusion of the original GTD was the pretense that it is the "what" "how" and "where" book but fundamentally it's just the "how" book relative to Getting Things Done Fast and the Weekly Review interview series. ONLY because that book could bury you if you treat it's "what" and "where" as dogma as many of the systems try to do when they compact it into a lite two concept system of "do and process" or as you say "thinker-toying".


566
Source: http://www.amazon.co...p;tag=&linkCode=

The original GTD was great because it gave tons of tips to stay organized: determining next actions and keeping them listed by project and context, setting up a tickler file, etc.. This new book is vague, doesn't contain any new tips, and talks about planning at the "10,000 foot level" "20,000 foot level" etc. just like the Stephen Covey books that GTD originally got away from. The original GTD was full of useful everyday tips to stay organized; this book is full of puffery without any discernible tip that will improve my workday. I'm left wondering what David Allen and his company have learned during the past 10 years they've been giving workshops about GTD to probably 10,000 or more people and coaching professionals on staying organized -- couldn't they have found some new nuggets about how to stay organized? Couldn't they have profiled specific people or professions that have put GTD into practice and customized it for their needs? There are probably enough tips alone submitted by GTD fans on [...] forums to make a new book! I was completely disappointed by this book. I kept leafing through it looking for insights I could use and there weren't any I could find.

I'm left literally thinking that David Allen wrote this book to keep his publishers happy or to keep his consulting firm going, to "stay relevant."

Save your money, in my opinion -- just buy the original Getting Things Done

Most of you already know this, most of you probably don't care for this but like I said in my previous post, I was trying to consume everything I could find that is linked to GTD in torrents so that I can finally firmly bury my opinion of it.

This include:

GTD (original)
GTD Weekly Review
GTD Workflow Map DVD
Ready for Anything
Making it All Work

and oh I read Getting Things Done Fast in the past.

So after finishing all these, this review sums it up for me and I think it's finally time to bury anything related to GTD. It was a step forward but everything nowadays has mostly returned backwards and this not only includes those who promote a productivity system but also those who often demand the type of systems like GTD and most of it's innovative concepts are re-buried nowadays.

If you happen to haven't check any of these yet though, here's the ones that are worth reading:

Ready for Anything - If only so you can see how bastardized the online over-simplifications are. Including such books as ZTD and arguably Mark Forster's AutoFocus system. I haven't really checked the other books and I haven't really read or heard anything new that has the same scope as GTD but the core point is - this is arguably a book that reads like 52 blog articles mashed up together and it's also the most useless of the GTD collection I have read. (Useless as in you get the same logic by installing any GTD software anyway and you're bound to either fail with GTD here or most likely be productive from it only because you have a self-esteem problem rather than a productivity problem)

Getting Things Done - As obvious as this sounds, this is still the most important book in the list. Not just for it's practicality like some people are praising it as but because the whys and the hows are all here. It's important to emphasize this because there is still this small dedicated cult opinion that GTD's whys are being explained in the subsequent books but really they're not. The one weakness with this book is that it's deceptively biblical. Take it too literally and you have to experiment with ticklers, paper systems, software, blah blah blah but there's no definite practicality here except for the theory with one exception which is almost laughable - Allen basically goes around the whole thesis but stops at mindmapping as if suddenly they are a critical component and yet he isn't brave enough to vouch for this other than say this is somewhere along the lines of how he processes the process stage. (hence the sort of confusion - you are introduced to great fundamental concepts especially if you know nothing about productivity systems before but it stops midway and assumes you will fill the little gaps on your own or offer your system to objects and locations you can "trust")

The sad part is, this book is also the one that verifies to me that most of the things that has been said later on including most of the interviews Allen makes basically destroyed the potential GTD has of being explained beyond this book and there's sort of a mythical belief now that it's about inbox/next actions/contexts/weekly reviews and it's mostly wrong. The in-basket has a certain concept. The Next Action has a certain meaning and purpose...even in the book if you sort of get "it" there's a sort of basic workflow image that once you see it kind of makes the whole concept feel like one big joke because it's like reading a great novel and suddenly someone shows you the table of contents of that novel and everyone praises what's written on the table of contents and not the actual book. I'm being audacious though as even David Allen doesn't go this far, although he pretty much insulted everyone who couldn't make GTD work in Making It All Work, but it's just the current opinion I have of this and most likely my final one as I'm not sure I will be revisiting GTD again.

I skimmed GTD before. I read many of the blogs about GTD. I tried many GTD programs.

Yet it's amazing how if you separate the book from the hype and try to analyze it - it's like what I originally assumed GTD softwares missed about GTD but increased tenfold.

This is a long paragraph but I just feel it's worth emphasizing because even mouser's GOE 2006 Assignments - I thought it was a sound enough representation of GTD but after looking at this book more closely, I clicked the Day 1 assignment right now and BAM! it's like this is wrong. I'd expand on this further but the reality is that I'm not sure if I could convey this since I'm not a GTD user myself and maybe it'll just come off like some sort of elite way of saying "I get this you don't but it just doesn't work for me but I'll insult your efforts anyway. Ha.Ha.". Also the point of mentioning this is to show how important this book remains still as far as understanding GTD is and how far every other supplemental material whether it be officially written by Allen or made by someone else. I still stand by that if you are truly unproductive, GTD won't make you productive but the concepts there are really like schools of thoughts that can't be captured in one word but could deceptively seem like they make sense interpreted as an outline of titles.

Getting Things Done Fast - As a stand-alone component, it just reads like Making it All Work and all the other "this is the why" not the how. What this has for it though is that if you've been burned out by GTD but are willing to verify still if you are not just misunderstanding the concepts within the first book - this has the gems of filling the gaps of what you might have missed. The con is that it's easy to miss. Literally if you feel like you "get" GTD - you won't appreciate many of the things said here until you re-hear it (the torrent is an audiobook) and it is the least redundant and bravest of all things clarifying what GTD is.

Getting Things Done Weekly Review - This is like a series of commentary by Allen and two women and it's mostly a waste of time. Think of it like a bonus snapshot interview you get from the Blu-Ray or DVD of a movie only there's no movie and there's no structure. Just random talking over each other. What makes this notable though is that this at least makes it clearer than Getting Things Done Fast as far as clarifying GTD (but only for the Weekly Review concept)

What I mean by this is that it at least is brave enough to say: Ok, Weekly Review is not really Weekly Review. Plus the subsequent examples just cements how you need a consultant to best sink in what the school of thought on the Weekly Review is really all about and how it's not what it looks like when people make a software around that concept and it's actually a more powerful version of Mark Forster's AutoFocus but only on the subtler philosophical training level rather than the structural level. (Then again, AutoFocus is basically a To-do list with a purpose)

I'm over-simplifying and exaggerating many of my points but the core idea is, if you misunderstand GTD, these interviews take a while to get to the point but you will at least have one realization where you misunderstood the concept of the Weekly Review if you listened to this interview in it's entirety. (although maybe it's been updated, the torrent only goes up to Review 3 sets)




567
Developer's Corner / Re: How did WordPress win?
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 18, 2011, 07:07 PM »
To be a devil's advocate:

I don't know if you can be considered aggressive if you are keeping in line with the competition and if you hear about some of the things professionals do nowadays - this doesn't even come close to aggressive.

Posterous for example while they were selling importing features for other blogs got a lot of flack for being aggressive by doing a pure feature per feature article on a popular blog service that wasn't down. It was unanimously lambasted for being over-aggressive even though it's a feature for feature comparison of a blog writer who's clearly working for Posterous and isn't even an attack ad.

No matter how many times the advocates of OSS and FOSS point that out, people still somehow have trouble understanding that. Maybe that's because the licensing employed by proprietary software products is part of the business model.

FSF promotes that most often but not FOSS as a whole. Even in this article, it's clear Wordpress wasn't branding itself as a business model OSS - it was branding itself as a cheaper alternative that won't screw you up in the middle of your usage. (hence the reference to the licensing debacle being a critical issue)

It's not about features, or technical excellence, or clean code, or any of the other critically important things software creators live with and by. Programmers constantly need to be reminded that it's not so much what they're interested in or believe. It's what the people in their deployed base want if they hope for their project to become popular.

Smart projects understand this and engage their community. And meaningfully interact with it.

People want to belong. Wordpress allowed them to do that. They got down with their users. They invited them in. They allowed them to play in the sandbox to a degree that was almost unprecedented at the time. And from that level engagement, Wordpress created a vibrant and vocal community that put it over the top.

It's not so much whether or not Wordpress is superior to MovableType. It's a question of which product, and company, and community the people like more.

In this case it was. Just see the comments for reference. It's a lot like saying people like Facebook over MySpace. Not really.

It's more like MySpace did a lot more for people to hate them. Certainly companies weren't moving to Facebook when it was an isolated social network.

Even today there are still some saying that. See this article for example.

Wordpress doesn't have a mindshare monopoly. It has a community of early adopters because it was the superior product by a large margin for a long time. My bar may be set a differently but I dare anyone try to compare the history between Twitter and Wordpress and you'll see Wordpress remains as just another blogging platform but Twitter is a brand to itself and micro-blogging is only mentioned in the same breathe as a way to categorize Twitter.

This doesn't mean one is superior or inferior than the other (and certainly it's more like apples and oranges) but Wordpress right now is at the same position as Ning if they had a smarter less greedier team behind it and even at the peak of Ning - no one considered Ning to have won the mindshare as much as they were the best service of their kind.

MoveableType didn't have its ball taken away from it. People simply found a different ballgame they'd rather play in.

And to characterize the events and actions that led to Wordpress trouncing MovableType in collective mindshare as a "war" further reinforces my belief that he still just doesn't get it.

No, I think he's correct.

If MovableType didn't do such huge critical mistakes - sure, different ballgame. Better model.

MovableType though wasn't a good alternative. It was just a leader in the same way Wordpress is the leader now. Only difference between the two is MovableType kept fumbling what was already an inferior service to Wordpress to begin with.

Let's face it - to ignore this is not a war is to ignore the crust of how services get ignored. Again to reference what someone said in the comments, how come Serendipity doesn't get as much press aside from those Wordpress vs. Serendipity articles? Little of that has to do with FOSS and more on how Wordpress wages a war while Serendipity doesn't.
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Living Room / Re: SEO funny businees I'm involved in. Thoughts?
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 18, 2011, 06:39 PM »
So should I keep writing for the site?  I can always make my own site, but I liked the idea of people helping with the non-writing stuff like putting the site together and maintaining it.

Well, the site doesn't have a name so it's hard to verify it one way or another.

It's also personnel based. For example, you might not like how Gizmo does things even though he has tons of readers. Then again, you might.

If you really want to write for a site you're not maintaining though (and assuming you're not desperate for a profit) guest blogging is the most flexible and most helpful as not only are you submitting articles but the owner is the one specifically judging whether the article would help his blog or not (plus the norm is to link to your own blog in the article)

P.S. You can actually profit from guest blogging but I haven't even nailed down making a basic profitable blog so I don't know anything about that.
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The Getting Organized Experiment of 2009 / Quick Quote: GTD vs. GOE
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 18, 2011, 11:33 AM »
A lot of you may notice how I'm resurrecting many old GTD concepts lately - this is because I'm recently going on a p2p surge of reading everything David Allen has written that's being seeded on a torrent. (just so I can completely drop my doubts about anything GTD again)

This one is from his 2nd book: Ready for Anything - 52 Productivity Principles for Work and Life. (Productivity Principle #41)

Are you an Organizing Groupie?

Just "getting organized" misses the crucial point: the need for thinking and intuitive decision making to get real work done. Once people catch on to the power of organization per se, they sometimes go too far and try to microorganize everything: "Let's create a system so you have to think at all!" But it can't be done. My systems do indeed relieve the mind of the tasks of remembering and reminding as much as I can, but they don't replace the need for regular executive thinking about my stuff. Organizing systems are there purely to serve as crude place-holders for targets and their critical parts and pieces. You must still engage your mind, your intelligence, and your vision to integrate those moving parts into the whole of how you interact with your world. No matter how good you are at creating macros in your spreadsheet or how sophisticated your PDA add-on, you won't be able to push a button, run a formula, and have the result be "Call Fred." Even if it did, you would have to consider a lot more things not on the spreadsheet or in your PDA to trust that judgement about your action decision

If everything's under control, you're going too slow - Mario Andretti

By the way...

Is there any "overkill" in your system? What tools or procedures have you set up that you are not using? What can be eliminated?

Do you feel you need to do more "project management"? Are you examining appropriate details and status of all your projects completely and consistently enough? If not, what could you do to install a more regular review process?

Take this for what you will. My intentions for sharing this quote is not so much to start spreading pirated content in DonationCoder as much as to bring to thought whether the GOE should have a name and concept lift or not. (assuming there's going to be a next GOE)
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Living Room / Re: Rant: I hate cellphones
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 18, 2011, 10:52 AM »
To summarize my point, I think I'm going to paraphrase this

If you're not paying for it, you are not the customer. You are the guy selling the product you payed with your own hard earned money for free.

...or something even more simple:

We gave away our freedom to them without much of a battle, now they want to take our slavery too.

Anyways I'm obviously not thinking rational and am talking over myself a lot so now I'm not going to post anything in DC for awhile. I apologize if I was unknowingly rude to anyone.
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General Software Discussion / Re: 3-Day Money Back Guarantee~! WOW~!
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 18, 2011, 10:29 AM »
Well, if it was any of my software, 3 days should be more than enough for anyone to realize how bad they are :P

+1 plus this goes back to the issue of transparency 40hz talked about in that other thread on the success of freeware.

Of course judging by the image, I don't think this is one of those times but speaking generally of freeware for example - I'd feel more confident if a developer is so confident in his design that he is willing to show you how 3 days is enough in figuring out whether you keep or pass up on their software.
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Living Room / Re: Rant: I hate cellphones
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 18, 2011, 10:24 AM »
Once when someone was using my account to send spam and a second time when my ID was being stolen. I was able to use the phone to change my password within five minutes of the first attack, locking them out.

The thing with this though is that you can have this option AFTER you made an account if Google really want to save you from getting hacked.

As far as people asking for you phone, I almost always give a false number, such as 222-2228. But here's a trick I use at hardware stores which routinely ask for your phone number at the point of purchase to "help verify a return if needed": I just give them their own store number on the front door. I've never once had an employee notice. And it's almost always within view of the cash registers since they're near the door.

Thanks. But these tips are always personal tips handed down to lucky people and mostly invented by social engineers. The average person who needs a free unintrusive webmail better hope they're a social creature who visits donationcoder or knows a person who does this.

Nonetheless, the worse sin is still how it trains people to do a certain something to get a certain something. It may not seem that this is really hazardous right now but down the line you're going to get the next generation equivalent of users and programs who install adware, unknowingly click ads, unknowingly open their mails to spam but in the context of the future where users willingly subject themselves to contextual ads, facebook spam and service inconvenience if you are not a smart knowledgeable web aware person. All for what?! Nothing. Spam now has an easier venue. Demands for stealing telephones and gadgets increases. Thieves are given more incentives to not just steal items and erase them but steal the data inside. All so that we could be given the illusion of feeling a little safer "currently" IF something wrong happens. I hate these type of things. Google already has the carte blanche of information from offering Gmail for free - at the very least they should make it more convenient to their users but now we're starting to see the pseudo-idealize big companies follow suit with the tactics Microsoft and Apple is known for and it's going to be an even rockier road from here on out for casual users introduced to technology.
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These types of applications are a lot like InfoQube.

The best real world example is the developer themselves. Often times, they can't find a specific app for their needs but they have the capability to do something more powerful and they have often been exposed to spreadsheets and tree outliners and so a natural progression of that is to create an even more powerful set of flexible program using mostly cells as the basis.

For TreeSheets in particular, the most important thing to understand about this is that it isn't a program that answers a need as much as fills a need. When people are searching for that one program because there's no other program that fills their requirements fully - this program becomes it.

However if you're just treating this as a program where you are looking for a to-do list, these can often seem needlessly complicated or lacking a checkbox.

The most important thing though is to treat this as a grocery list with a calculator. (Check the first sub-grid example)

In that context, it's a more powerful to-do list as it's to-do mixed with an outliner view mixed with a spreadsheet like grid.

...but again, only if a basic checkbox isn't good enough for you and only if the alternative you are looking for is working and looking more like a database outliner than say a notetaker.

The mindmap replacement comes more from the fact that you can have a cell that's on the left or right side or that's zoomed out and then zooms in as well as the inclusion of images.
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Living Room / Rant: I hate cellphones
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 18, 2011, 07:20 AM »
Just venting out some anger and apparently this is old news:

So it's been a while since I created a Gmail account. Lo and behold as soon as I hit the account creation menu it was asking for mobile phone number verification. Oh ****

There's probably a loophole out there if I just Google a bit but I ****ing hate it when companies do this. I hated when IMDB did this even though I wasn't even a poster at all because it didn't ****ing increase the intelligence of the posters there anyway and it just trains non-techies to hand out their personal information willy nilly.

The worse thing about this all is that unlike DRM it ****ing screws the guys who don't know or have the interest in abusing the system. Gmail could have ****ing gone freemium for this but no... apparently everyone must suffer in this ever changing world where cellphones are not phones but jiggle widget automatons of spam and pay. No wonder the IPhone was a success: It was the first ****ing affordable OSX!!!

P.S. Please delete this if this crosses the line. Lately I'm feeling strange. Maybe it's this energy drink I drank. I know I'm not drunk but **** it. Poor model for reducing spam or mail abuse. Worse gmail idea since Buzz's genius idea to make your gmail details public. Where's a ****ing genius when you need it: http://www.geekcultu...oyarchives/1504.html

Google, next time, just ****ing sell a pager (or put a ****ing Gmail serial in one of your new netbooks) before doing similar **** like this. You don't want Facebook to steal your e-mail market too.
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