TidBITS#840/31-Jul-06
=====================

  Do you spend more time trying to stay organized than actually
  accomplishing what's on your list? Jeff Porten returns this week
  with some concrete steps for implementing the Getting Things Done
  organizational system. AppleCare owners can download a disk image
  to make a bootable CD that contains a universal binary of TechTool
  Deluxe. We also note the releases of a Bluetooth Mighty Mouse and
  Mark/Space's The Missing Sync for Windows Mobile 5, along with
  news of a MacBook Pro battery recall and a new version of Audio
  Hijack Pro that simplifies recording voice over IP phone calls
  for podcasts.

Topics:
    MailBITS/31-Jul-06
    AppleCare Provides Bootable TechTool CD
    Rogue Amoeba Hijacks Phone Calls More Easily
    Getting Things Done with Your Macintosh, Part 2
    Take Control News/31-Jul-06
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/31-Jul-06

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-840.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2006/TidBITS#840_31-Jul-06.etx>

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MailBITS/31-Jul-06
------------------

**Wireless Mighty Mouse Debuts** -- The cartoon Mighty Mouse
  may have had a tail, but Apple has taken the carving knife to
  their Mighty Mouse's tail, replacing its USB cable with wireless
  connectivity via Bluetooth 2.0. Physically, the wireless Mighty
  Mouse is essentially the same as its cabled predecessor (other
  than the lack of a cable, of course), with up to four buttons
  that can be programmed independently: a pair of touch sensors on
  the upper right and left sides of the mouse, a multi-directional
  Scroll Ball that can also be pressed, and sensors that generate
  an action when the user squeezes the sides of the mouse. It runs
  on either one or two AA batteries, automatically switches to a
  low-power mode during periods of inactivity, and includes an off
  switch to eliminate battery drain when not in use. Apple isn't
  making any battery life claims at this point. The wireless Mighty
  Mouse is available immediately for $70; it requires Mac OS X
  10.4.6 or later to customize the button actions. The wired Mighty
  Mouse remains available for $50, and as Apple somewhat oddly
  points out, works with PCs using Windows 2000 or Windows XP. [ACE]

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mighty_Mouse>
<http://www.apple.com/mightymouse/>
<http://www.apple.com/mightymouse/software.html>
<http://www.apple.com/mightymouse/specs.html>


**Apple Recalls Underperforming MacBook Pro Batteries** -- Apple
  has initiated a worldwide recall for some 15-inch MacBook Pro
  batteries that were sold between February 2006 and May 2006,
  due to lack of performance (and not due to safety risks, such
  as a string of recent Dell laptops that have caught fire).
  To identify batteries covered under the program, look on the
  underside of the battery for model number A1175 and a 12-digit
  serial number that ends with U7SA, U7SB, or U7SC. [JLC]

<https://support.apple.com/macbookpro15/batteryexchange/>
<http://www.gizmodo.com/gadgets/dell/another-dell-laptop-goes-kabloom-190579.php>


**Missing Sync for Windows Mobile 2.5 Enables Mac Sync** -- Many
  of today's high-end cell phones are powered by Microsoft's Windows
  Mobile 5 operating system, which meant that Mac users couldn't
  synchronize their contact information and other data. Now, the
  release of Mark/Space's The Missing Sync for Windows Mobile 2.5
  jumps over that hurdle. The new version ties into Apple's Sync
  Services under Mac OS X 10.4.7 or later for addresses, calendar
  items, and to-do lists, and it offers specific support for
  synchronizing data with Microsoft Entourage. It also includes
  plug-ins for iTunes and iPhoto to transfer music and photos to
  the phone, as well as the capability to mount the device on the
  Desktop for direct file transfer. A new toolbar in version 2.5
  offers quick access to commands, including an easy way to install
  Windows Mobile software. The Missing Sync for Windows Mobile 2.5
  is a free update for owners of version 2.0 or later, or as a $40
  electronic download (or $50 CD) for new users. Upgrades from older
  versions or some other eligible products cost $20. [JLC]

<http://www.microsoft.com/windowsmobile/>
<http://www.markspace.com/missingsync_windowsmobile.php>
<http://www.markspace.com/missingsync_wm_upgrade.php>


**Back End Transition Postponed** -- Other deadlines prevented us
  from completing our testing of our new back end system, but we've
  rescheduled for this coming week. Keep your fingers crossed that
  TidBITS #841 will be generated and delivered using our new system.
  Again, keep your eyes on ExtraBITS if anything seems wonky with
  that issue. [ACE]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=08610>
<http://www.tidbits.com/ExtraBITS/>


AppleCare Provides Bootable TechTool CD
---------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>

  Apple's dependence upon third-party software has long been a major
  weakness of the AppleCare Protection Plan. For years, AppleCare
  purchasers have complained that the package included a Micromat
  TechTool Deluxe CD that either wouldn't boot the computer for
  which AppleCare had been purchased or (worse) would boot it but,
  when run, would damage the hard disk structure in such a way as
  to make the data unrecoverable. TechTool revisions have been few
  and far between and have always lagged behind major operating
  system and hardware revisions. Nor does Apple communicate with
  purchasers to let them know of such revisions (at least, they've
  never communicated with this purchaser).

<http://www.apple.com/support/products/>
<http://www.micromat.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=37&
Itemid=51>

  Current AppleCare contract holders will therefore be happy
  to learn that Micromat has furnished a new TechTool version
  (3.1.1) that comes in two flavors, one for Intel-based Macs
  and another for PowerPC-based Macs. It's available as a free
  download from Apple (in exchange for the serial number of your
  AppleCare-registered machine). The download, which is about
  200 MB, is a disk image; it can be used to install the software
  on your computer or to burn a bootable CD.

<https://support.apple.com/techtooldeluxe/main?id=dl>

  In addition to support for Intel-based Macs, TechTool Deluxe 3.1.1
  can now perform Volume Structure testing of the startup volume,
  has replaced Diagnostic and Rezero Unit tests, and has added Drive
  Hardware and Directory Scan options. A software updater is
  available as a 4.5 MB download.

<http://www.micromat.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=166&
Itemid=61>


Rogue Amoeba Hijacks Phone Calls More Easily
--------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>

  Audio Hijack Pro has been updated to better capture phone
  conversations. No, the folks at Rogue Amoeba haven't signed up
  with the NSA. Rather, they've recognized the ongoing interest
  in recording Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) calls, whether
  computer-to-computer or computer-to-PSTN (Public Switched
  Telephone Network - you know, the real phone network).

<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/audiohijackpro/>

  Audio Hijack Pro 2.7 bypasses a fairly wacky setup that I
  described for O'Reilly Networks last year, and worked with Andy
  Affleck-Williams to build into his "Take Control of Podcasting
  on the Mac" ebook, which I edited. Audio Hijack Pro is designed
  to capture sound from any application or system resource and
  pass it through. Combining multiple capture streams enables live
  mixing, and built-in filters enable live processing, too.

<http://www.macdevcenter.com/pub/a/mac/2005/10/10/how-to-podcast.html>
<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/podcasting-mac.html?14@@!pt=TRK-TB840>

  The difficulty was, primarily, when recording a podcast or for
  other purposes, having the sound on a headset's earpiece totally
  or partially suppressed to avoid echo, while still recording each
  voice. It was also impossible within Audio Hijack Pro to capture
  each side of a conversion separately without recording separate
  audio files and mixing them later in another application.

  The newest version, a free update for existing registered
  users, adds MegaMix, which enables hijacking of both sides
  of a conversion, with an added option to record each voice
  separately. Simply creating a stream (Session > New) and
  choosing a VoIP program handles the details. You can modify
  the default choice of mixing down both sides of a conversation
  by clicking Advanced in the Input tab and checking Separate
  Inputs and Outputs by Channel. (Rogue Amoeba has good
  illustrations in this blog entry.)

<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/utm/posts/Article/ahp27-tour-2006-07-31-12-00>

  Solutions already exist for several major VoIP programs. Apple's
  iChat AV can record directly to GarageBand 3, with one track
  per participant in conference calls. A new plug-in for Skype,
  Ecamm Network's Call Recorder, enables multiple track recording
  within that software. The Gizmo Project has long provided direct
  MP3 recording, too.

<http://www.apple.com/macosx/features/ichat/>
<http://www.apple.com/ilife/garageband/features/ichatrecording.html>
<http://www.skype.com/>
<http://www.ecamm.com/mac/callrecorder/>
<http://www.gizmoproject.com/screen-shots.html>


Getting Things Done with Your Macintosh, Part 2
-----------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Porten <civitan@jeffporten.com>

  In part 1 of this article, I introduced David Allen's Getting
  Things Done system, and looked at several programs that could
  help you implement that system. Now, I want to go into more
  detail about how GTD works, specifically on a day-to-day basis
  on your Mac.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=08614>


**Mind Like Aqua Finder** -- Remember, the key to GTD is to get
  tasks, vague plans, and random thoughts into the right collection
  buckets and out of your head as quickly as possible. Apple,
  in its Infinite Loop wisdom, has provided us all with a collection
  bucket that is always staring us in the face, but almost no one
  uses it properly as a productivity tool. I'm talking about the
  Finder Desktop.

  So, what's on your Desktop? If you're like 95 percent of
  my clients, your Desktop contains the following: aliases to
  frequently used documents and applications; documents you worked
  on last Tuesday with cryptic filenames; a few notes that might
  be relevant around Christmas; and most importantly, the files
  related to whatever is the Project of the Week.

  Here's what I suggest you do: in your User folder, create a folder
  called "Desktop Storage." Drag everything on the Desktop into that
  folder. Voila, clean desk!

  "But what about the Project of the Week?" No problem. In your
  master list (which, as we learned in part 1, can be anything
  from iCal to a TextEdit document to an outline in OmniOutliner),
  add a recurring entry to "Review Desktop Storage." The Project
  of the Week should go on one of your lists. The other stuff?
  You can process that later. But you can put your aliases in
  the Dock (and clean out the ones you don't need, regularly),
  file the cryptic documents, and have the Christmas stuff come
  back after Thanksgiving (more on this later). Most importantly,
  you don't have to do this now. Those items weren't getting any
  more organized while they were festering on your Desktop,
  so it won't do you any harm to have them sitting in storage
  for a while, provided you have a trusted reminder on your
  master list to bring you back to it.

  Why do this? Because a clean desk is a clean slate. Click on
  the Desktop (with no Finder windows open), and go to View >
  Show View Options, where you can set how your files appear.
  I prefer setting the font to 11 points, with small icons, label
  positions on the right, and kept arranged by name; this creates
  a neat list in a compact space, which I can usually see behind
  the windows I have open. Over the course of my workday, everything
  I work on, download, modify, or transmogrify is kept on my Desktop
  (with one exception: when I'm working with files that are already
  neatly organized elsewhere, I use aliases to those documents
  instead.) At the end of my day, the files on my Desktop are
  a map of where I've conceptually been today; rearrange by
  Date Modified, and I can see the chronological order in which
  I was there as well.

  At the end of the day (or every couple of days, more commonly),
  I process my Desktop. Files that I'm done with - no next action,
  ever again - are either filed or trashed, according to whether
  I might want them again someday. Files that I need in the future
  are stored in a tickler system or a "Someday" folder. Files that
  have immediate followup are annotated and stored in an appropriate
  task system.

  I can hear you saying, "Nice. How?" It's all done with the Finder,
  and a sprinkling of iCal and AppleScript.


**Taglines and Ticklers and Softwares, Oh My!**  Let's start with
  the basics. You're knocking off work and processing your Desktop -
  which probably only has a dozen or so files on it, since you
  regularly clean off your desk. Do you ever need a particular
  file again? If not, toss it. The Trash is your friend. The goal
  isn't to save disk space - we all have enough to save a bazillion
  URLs for future reference. You're saving mind space, and saying,
  "This never deserves my attention, ever again."

  Or perhaps you do need that file again. If the file is part of an
  active project which you will likely need soon, go ahead and put
  it in an Active Projects folder, in a subfolder with a suitable
  name. On my desktop right now I have this very article, and the
  Active Projects folder is where it's going to live at the end of
  the day. But after this article is published, it's no longer an
  active project - and hence I'll move it to the long-term filing.

Do you have a folder structure that looks like the following?

    Users > jporten > Documents > Writing > Mac > TidBITS >
    In Progress > GTD > Drafts

  So did I. What an unholy mess. Here's what my file structure looks
  like now (both the active and archived locations):

    Users > jporten > Active Projects > TidBITS GTD
    Users > jporten > Archives > 2006-07

  That's it. I create a new folder every month, put it into my
  Finder sidebar, and viciously file documents there to get them out
  of my way. If I need a file, I can generally recall when I used
  them last and go right to the correct folder, or I let Spotlight
  do the work for me. Sure, I could spend hours tinkering with my
  folders - but life is too short. This system, where you file only
  by the age of the document, is called Noguchi, and it works nicely
  for paper too. Unfortunately, the original Web page that taught
  me this system has been taken offline, but this page points to
  some good secondary resources.

<http://vielmetti.typepad.com/vacuum/2005/10/noguchi_filing_.html>

  So that's how we deal with trash, current work, and finished
  work. How about stuff we want to get back to later? There are
  two categories of these: things we'll get to when we get to
  (and don't much care when that is), and things we want to look
  at again on a specific date.

  For the former, I have a Someday folder in my home folder.
  It holds things ranging from scraps of notes I made about my
  cockamamie business idea for 2008, to URLs I want to visit,
  to software I want to play with. These items have only two things
  in common: none of them have deadlines, so they can all just sit
  there forever; and all of them have been given a yellow Finder
  label to tell me that there's a comment attached (in the Get Info
  window), to remind me what it is I wanted to do with this file.
  Since it might be months before I get to it, why spend time trying
  to remember why I saved it? I fire up an AppleScript script that
  tacks a few words into its comment box and colors it yellow in
  one swoop; yellow is just my mnemonic for a "sticky note" to
  remind me to read the comments. (And yes, the script is on my
  Web site, along with another one that randomly chooses an item
  in the Someday folder to deal with. It's just more fun that
  way - who wants to work on the moldiest items first?)

<http://jeffporten.com/2006/07/31/tidbits-gtd-applescripts/>

  But for stuff with deadlines, I want to be sure I see it when
  I need it - and no sooner. So I have another folder that contains
  one folder for every day for the rest of the year. When Adam tells
  me he might be interested in my article on connecting a MacBook
  to a juice blender sometime in October, I just drag my notes
  about that to a folder in late September. Every morning, while
  I'm sleeping and my computer is not, an iCal event triggers
  a script that dumps that day's files on my Desktop, and boom,
  they become part of that day's processing. That script is also
  part of my download.

  What works great about this for me is that it's a file-and-forget
  process, and I almost always have an easy target. I'm looking at
  a Web site I want to get back to later, so I drag the URL out
  of Safari to my Desktop. When I'm processing it later, I either
  read it then, or I tickle it for the weekend or attach it to some
  project or task. In this way, everything gets captured, but most
  often in a way that doesn't require me to spend an hour diddling
  around with deciding on where to put something.

  So now do you see why you cleaned off your Desktop at the
  beginning of this article? Your Desktop is special - no other
  location on your hard disk gives you a wide, always-available
  target. If you like, when it comes time to process your
  Desktop Storage, go ahead and dump them back on the Desktop
  for processing - but put them away again later if you don't
  finish. Your Desktop is a workspace, not a catch-all for your
  entire life. That's what your hard disk is for, with your lists
  to remind you to go back into its nooks and crannies.


**Linking Your Stuff to Tasks** -- We'll stay with files a little
  longer, since so much of what we work with ends up being a file
  somewhere on your hard disk. If you want to be compulsively
  organized (and if you're still reading this, you know you do),
  it's key to be able to pull up your support files immediately
  when you turn to a particular task. With OmniOutliner, this
  is easy; just drag the file or an alias into your outline,
  and you're done. What about task managers like iCal and Life
  Balance, which don't allow for importing files?

  (Incidentally, I don't intend to give Entourage short shrift;
  Entourage has a  nice system for linking tasks to projects and
  files with internal linking. I used it for years. In the long run,
  though, it wasn't flexible enough for my needs, so I abandoned
  it for this system. My guess is that if you're an Entourage user
  and you're building your system, you'll be staying entirely within
  that software and won't need my help with its specific tricks.
  I will mention, though, that if you're not using AppleScript
  utilities to help manage your data, you're missing half the
  power of your software.)

<http://scriptbuilders.net/cat.php?category_list=2&act=show_cat&cat_id=2>

  You may have noticed that iCal events and tasks have a URL field,
  and if you paste in a URL that you copy out of Safari, you get
  a nice "open this location" button when you select it again.
  Very handy. But you can also do this with your files, since
  every file on your hard disk can be "URLified" to look like this:
  file:///Users/jporten/Desktop/gtd%20article.rtf. The problem is
  that these URLs don't follow the files when you move them to a
  new folder. So, I have another AppleScript script (which you can
  download at my site) that creates an alias and links the URL to
  that instead; the URL always points to the alias, and the alias
  points to the actual file no matter where it moves. If you need
  multiple files linked, then link to a folder instead that holds
  them all. Feel free to use the same trick with the URL field in
  Address Book to connect files to people.

  As for other applications that don't have explicit URL fields,
  a nifty Mac trick works in every Cocoa application. (It's not
  always clear which applications are Cocoa; don't spend time
  trying to figure it out, just try it and see if it works with
  your favorites.) When you paste a URL into a text field, it still
  looks like plain text, but many applications will know it's a URL.
  In Life Balance, Command-click on it to open it; in TextEdit,
  Control-click on it and choose Open URL. Now you can connect
  pretty much anything you want to anything else - for example,
  if you want to link one file to another file, go ahead and put
  the second file's URL into the Finder comments of the first one.
  It works there too with a Command-click.


**Dividing Current Stuff from Ongoing Stuff** -- In case you
  didn't notice, the process I just talked about with your Desktop
  has the great advantage of focusing your attention on a current
  set of files. If you need to work with something, dump it on
  the Desktop. When you're done, put it away somewhere appropriate.
  Those other 300,000 files on your hard drive? Not in the way.
  Can we apply this method to tasks as well? Here's how I do it.

  In your master list, no matter where you keep it, you'll have
  your life's smorgasbord of things that you want to do. It's big,
  and it's daunting, and that's okay because presumably you'll
  have a few decades in which to tackle it. The problem arises
  when it's 3 PM and you hear about a book you want to read on
  the radio, or that funny noise comes out of your air conditioner,
  and you just want to write it down and move on. Or you want
  to make super-duper sure that you get back to it today, not
  in two weeks.

  Enter iCal tasks. I use my iCal task list the same way I use
  my Desktop. The day starts empty, or with the events that I've
  tickled a while ago to show up today. iCal has a feature to hide
  events that aren't due yet, so don't put the actual due date
  in that field; put in the date you want to be reminded of it.
  If you're properly breaking your work down into small, doable
  next actions, the due date can always be the same day as the
  reminder date; however, if you're quickly noting a project for
  review later, go ahead and write "Big report due August 31" with
  a "due date" - that is, your reminder date - of August 7th,
  or however much lead time you'll need to do the big report.

  Ideally, at the end of each day, all of my iCal tasks have one
  of three outcomes: it's done, it's moved to my master list and
  deleted from iCal, or I decide it's not that important and just
  plain deleted. (I've learned I save a lot of time if I let every
  new idea incubate for a little while; it takes time for silly
  ideas to ripen and smell bad.) This way, my iCal to-do list is
  always short and doable - and yes, there's a recurring Routine
  task in my master list telling me to do these things. I also
  review the tasks that are done; sometimes they're worth noting
  in my master list, especially when I realize that this is just
  the first step of an ongoing project.

  One of the more important categories of tasks that I add to iCal
  aren't really tasks at all, but rather are "waiting for" ticklers.
  These are items that are out of my hands, but I'm still invested
  in getting it done; for example, "WF email from Adam re GTD
  article," or "WF rebate from Amazon." It's a quick method of
  noting that something might need more action in the future, but
  not now. It's even quicker if you use Quicksilver, the DoBeDo
  Dashboard widget, or your favorite iCal-integrated utility to
  update your list without jumping into iCal.

<http://quicksilver.blacktree.com/ >
<http://www.bluehenley.com/products/dobedo/>

  By the way, if you're still cringing in panic about the idea
  of removing your Project of the Week off your Desktop, I strongly
  recommend iCalViewer. It's a fantastic utility that plasters
  your iCal events and tasks as a transparent background across
  your Desktop. If, like me, you want to be hit in the face with
  a regular reminder that you need to do something - or get off
  your butt in 30 minutes to get to that upcoming meeting -
  it's a life-saver. But don't use your files for that; use iCal.

<http://www.icalviewer.com/>


**Taming Your Email and Inbox Zero** -- You've likely noted a
  trend; with both your Desktop and your iCal tasks, I've suggested
  ways to keep your workspaces clean and fresh, so what shows
  up there for your immediate attention is always manageable and
  relevant. There's one more place to do this: your email. I keep
  an archive of approximately 650,000 messages, dating back to 1997,
  but as I write this, my inbox has exactly zero messages.

  You do this by treating your inbox as an inbox, not as a staging
  folder for reminders of stuff to do. You've got your master list
  and iCal for that. And the way you empty your inbox is to rip
  through your messages with the following rule: read once, do it if
  it can be done quickly (and I'm talking around two minutes here),
  or file it and forget it. This process was memorably named "Inbox
  Zero" by Merlin Mann, and I can no longer imagine working with
  email without it.

  I use Apple Mail, and my system for this uses the excellent
  MailTags and Mail Act-On from InDev; MailTags allows you to attach
  metadata to your email messages, like tags and due dates, while
  Mail Act-On lets you create fast keyboard commands for mail
  processing. Similar capabilities exist in Entourage; I don't know
  how Thunderbird, Eudora, or Gmail users would do this, but I
  strongly suspect a Google search will turn up ways to replicate
  these techniques.

<http://www.indev.ca/>

  Again, you want to follow the principles that you used in
  creating your Finder filing system - don't spend forever
  creating hierarchies of folders that you need to manage
  meticulously. Go with the simplest possible filing system
  that covers your needs. I use a grand total of seven categories
  when an email needs some action on my part. The first five are
  priorities, ranging from Urgent to Lowest. Urgent means exactly
  that - this task will die screaming if I don't do it today.
  I file most email messages with either High or Normal priority.
  I've learned that Low or Lowest priority messages might rot
  unseen for months, so I take that into account when prioritizing
  my email.

  The other two categories (which MailTags calls "projects")
  are ReplyTo or WaitingFor. I use ReplyTo for things like email
  to friends, or general business correspondence that doesn't
  really have a deadline; by default, these acquire with priorities
  between High and Normal in my review folders, but sometimes I
  notch these higher or lower depending on what else is going on.
  (My review folders are Mail's Smart Mailboxes; they're named
  with leading numbers so they sort as I like them: 20 High,
  25 ReplyTo, 30 Normal, 99 WaitingFor.) WaitingFor just notes
  that there's something I need to do with this email but can't
  get to just yet, or an email I sent is waiting for a reply.
  Sometimes I'll use the MailTags notes field to remind myself
  exactly what I'm waiting for, if it wouldn't be instantly
  obvious the next time I review that email.

  What I don't do, however, is tag every possible message with every
  possible project name to which it might be connected. I've found
  that with Spotlight searches, there's almost no need to do this.
  On those occasions when I might need a series of email messages
  to review all at once, I'll create a topical project and a
  Smart Mailbox to collect them. But there's a weekly Routine task
  reminding me to cull these folders - I don't want 16,000 of them
  cluttering up Apple Mail; I want just the five or ten I'm working
  on. When I'm done, I delete the Smart Mailbox, write down the
  MailTag somewhere for posterity in case I ever need the folder
  back, and let the messages live quietly in my Read Mail archive.
  The result is that my mailboxes, like my iCal and Desktop, reflect
  a list of things I'm currently managing and don't fill up with
  useless trivia and distractions.

  A new feature in MailTags allows you to connect an email message
  directly to a task in iCal, so I have a mix of older tasks that
  are noted within the MailTags notes field, and newer ones that
  are connected to an iCal task. I'm leaning toward using iCal
  tasks for Urgent and High priority issues but keeping Normal
  and lower priority work solely in Mail - again, with the idea
  of keeping iCal from feeling like a towering mass of stuff that
  discourages me from doing it. Email messages that are MailTagged
  to an iCal task can be opened directly from iCal, using a clever
  implementation of the task URL field.

  MailTags is also great for filing, since it enables you to apply
  Noguchi to your email. An email, after it's been read once, goes
  one of two places: the Trash or the Read Mail folder. If it has
  a priority or a category, or if it's connected to an iCal task,
  it's suitably flagged and can be retrieved with a Smart Mailbox.
  When I'm done with it, I just clear the tags and let it drop out
  of my Smart Mailboxes; the email is already in the Read Mail
  folder, which is where it goes for posterity.

  Finally, there's the action step in my Routine list that makes all
  of this functional. I have a daily reminder to check my messages
  in Smart Mailboxes, and all I do is start with the Urgents and
  work my way down until I'm out of time. Items I mark High priority
  generally means that I should make time for them; items marked
  Normal can wait a while, but should be cleared out regularly - so
  there's an additional weekly reminder that tells me to catch up on
  any I've missed. And last, another set of reminders come up weekly
  to review the WaitingFors to see if I need to pick up any dropped
  balls, which I generally do while doing my Smart Mailbox and tag
  review cleanup.


**Getting to Zero and Getting Things Done** -- So, we've now
  covered the three key Zen concepts of "Mac mind like water":
  Inbox Zero, Desktop Zero, and iCal Zero. It doesn't matter
  how horribly overstuffed these workspaces are right now; with
  judicious use of your master list and backup lists, you can make
  these into highly functional and low-stress places to organize
  your work and stay focused. But that begs the question of whether
  this actually helps you get stuff done.

  Like all such systems, it's only as good as you are. My "clean"
  iCal list has a few items that have been festering for a while,
  so I'm proof positive that this isn't a cure for procrastination.
  You still need to actually do what you need to do. Where I feel
  my greatest sense of relief - and yes, my semblance of "mind
  like water" - is that GTD gives me a way to deal with a problem
  I suspect many of you have: my "things I want to do" mind has very
  little regard for "how much time I have to do it." I want to learn
  Italian (still!) and learn Python; I haven't done either yet,
  and both are stashed into various Someday folders. If I forget
  I want to learn Italian and think of it again, fine; it'll just
  be written down twice. No big deal. This is the first system
  I've discovered that honors my random and not-immediately-relevant
  ideas, but still moves them out of the way of things that need
  to be prioritized.

  Perhaps the best thing about GTD is that it's easy to get back on
  the horse after a few missteps. I didn't process my email properly
  for a few days and I had 150 messages in my inbox; when I had a
  chance, I sat down for an hour and processed them and now I'm back
  to zero. That could work for 750 or 2,250 email messages if I
  had a really bad month; usually it just takes a few days before
  I notice I'm slipping and get back into the habit. But I have 4 GB
  of files waiting for me in my Desktop Storage folder, from dozens
  of sweeps off the Desktop I never finished processing; I know
  that most of those files are low priority - after all, I never
  went looking for them and haven't missed them - but it's nagging
  at me that I need to process them, just to make sure. And that
  nagging feeling is the feedback loop that keeps the system
  working.


**GTD Resources** -- The procedures I've listed here came about
  only after a great deal of error and trial. (I'm deliberately
  reversing the order of that phrase; it seems apropos when the
  errors so vastly outnumbered the trials.) There's something about
  GTD that leads adherents to tinker endlessly with it, and then
  to go to online forums and meticulously document their tinkering.
  If my ideas aren't exactly your cup of caffeine, rest assured,
  there are about 10,000 alternative methods out there to borrow
  and make your own.

  The first stop is the informative and entertaining 43 Folders
  weblog by Merlin Mann. This is possibly one of the few weblogs
  where it is worth your time to go back to the beginning of the
  archives and read it all. 43 Folders has spawned two discussion
  forums (one Web-based, one email), and a wiki, all of which
  are refreshingly Mac-centric in flavor. If you're interested
  in learning some of the deep voodoo that is Darwin, there's
  a great deal of Unix talent on these boards as well.

<http://www.43folders.com/ >
<http://board.43folders.com/ >
<http://groups.google.com/group/43Folders >
<http://wiki.43folders.com/index.php/Main_Page>

  Other good sources of GTD discussion are the various blogs that
  are linked to Office Zealot; if the only places you check are
  Office Zealot and 43 Folders, that alone should be more than
  enough content to ensure you're spending too much time tinkering
  with your system. The lineup at Office Zealot seems to change
  regularly, but as I write this, they've highlighted links to
  Slacker Manager and Michael Hyatt, whose blogs frequently show
  up in recommended reading in the lists I read.

<http://www.officezealot.com/gtd/>
<http://slackermanager.com/>
<http://michaelhyatt.blogs.com/>

  Finally, there's the "mothership" at DavidCo, home of David Allen
  himself (or "The David," as cultists winkingly refer to him).
  I don't stop here too often, because the sales pitch for
  workshops, seminars, and private consulting comes off a bit
  strong (although I've frequently heard that these are worthwhile,
  if pricey). But the archives here are definitely worth an
  afternoon or two to look for good ideas, and I recommend the
  free monthly newsletter of tips and tricks.

<http://www.davidco.com/>

  And again, here are those AppleScript scripts I repeatedly
  mentioned.

<http://jeffporten.com/2006/07/31/tidbits-gtd-applescripts/>

  It took me a solid few years before I developed this working
  system, and I have no doubt that a year from now I'll have
  incorporated a few new techniques and discarded a few of these.
  I equally have no doubt that in that year I'll spend more time
  than I should playing around with new software and making pretty
  stacks of sandwich orders. Such is the nature of the beast for
  most of us. For your own implementation, I suggest you start
  by reading the "Getting Things Done" book, putting everything
  imaginable into your inbox for processing, and creating a small,
  incremental system for processing it.

  It might take a few months before you really feel comfortable,
  and a few more before you really feel productive. Most of us are
  very glad we made the trip.

  [Jeff Porten is an Internet consultant in Washington, DC,
  who practices maybe three out of seven effective habits.]

    PayBITS: Has Jeff helped bring order to your Mac?
    Show your appreciation via a PayBITS donation!
    <http://www.paypal.com/xclick/business=civitan%40jeffporten.com>
    Read more about PayBITS: <http://www.tidbits.com/paybits/>


Take Control News/31-Jul-06
---------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

**$10-off Parallels Desktop Coupon Extended** -- The good folks
  at Parallels were kind enough to extend the $10-off coupon for
  Parallels Desktop in Take Control of Running Windows on a Mac.
  So the coupon code - the same one that's been in the ebook from
  the beginning - no longer expires 31-Jul-06. We've updated all
  the copies that people might download via eSellerate or our
  Check for Updates page, but since the only change was to remove
  the expiration date, we did not increment the ebook's version
  number, which remains at 1.0.2. So if you don't get around to
  using your $10-off coupon on Parallels Desktop before July 31st,
  don't worry, it will be good for some time yet. Nevertheless,
  we can't guarantee how long Parallels will wish to keep the
  coupon active, so if you think you want to take advantage of it,
  we'd encourage you to do so sooner rather than later.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/windows-on-mac.html?14@@!pt=
TRK-0034-TB840-TCNEWS>


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/31-Jul-06
------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>

  The first link for each thread description points to the
  traditional TidBITS Talk interface; the second link points
  to the same discussion on our Web Crossing server, which
  provides a different look and which may be faster.


**Calling Mac Developers: Request for a Collaborative Editor** --
  Adam's article asking for a collaborative writing and editing
  application garners lots of suggestions. Are any of them what
  TidBITS and Macworld are looking for? (12 messages)

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=3064>
<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/895/>


**AppleCare Provides Bootable TechTool CD** -- A universal binary
  version of TechTool Deluxe is available, and AppleCare members
  can download a free disk image that will burn a bootable CD.
  But even if your AppleCare has recently expired, it's worth
  checking out. (1 message)

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=3066>
<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/898/>



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