43 Folders

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”What’s 43 Folders?”
43Folders.com is Merlin Mann’s website about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.

Remainders: Sick box, subject lines, phone hacks, and 6 months of 43F

  • Create a “sick box” - Make up a little box filled with all the stuff you’ll want fast access to on the next morning you wake up with a cold. TheraFlu, cough drops, fresh box of Kleenex, unwatched DVD you’ve been saving, a nice trashy novel, and the phone numbers of anyone you’d need to contact at work. Believe me, you’re in no mood to collect this crap when you wake up with the flu kicking your ass.
  • UNIX in a NutshellPhonecam wishlisting - Use your mobile phone’s camera to give yourself a reminder about something you might want to buy later. Snag the UPC and pull it up later to add to your next Amazon cart.
  • Standarize your Subject lines - I think well-crafted email subject lines are largely a lost art today. Back in the day, people would use them like IMs, creating a message where the Subject line could stand as a request or answer all by itself. No more. I know I’m guilty of my share of “Subject: Hi” emails to be sure. We all are. But good subjects can save tons of time when used correctly and consistently. Whenever I manage projects, I encourage everyone to start the subject line for all project emails with the same 4-6 letter code. Spacely Sprockets’ project emails might start with “SPROCK,” for example. This makes filtering a breeze and helps you visually organize your inbox more quickly, especially when you work with a given person across several projects.
  • Acute Strategies - Everybody knows I’m a big fan of Eno’s “Oblique Strategies” cards (my favorite being “Honour thy error as a hidden intention”). I keep my deck right next to my computer and flip through them frequently. I’ve recently started a txt file of Acute Strategies. Half joke and half common sense, I sometimes find them helpful or at least good for a laugh. Samples: “Go change your shirt,” “Answer 5 emails,” “Stop interrupting people,” or “Clean the kitchen for 10 minutes”. (cf. “Hack your way out of writer’s block”)
  • Silence the nuisance - Another phone hack. If you’ve ever had your phone temporarily mistaken for a fax machine or been banged on by a rogue VoIP telemarketing farm, you may have wished you could just tear the ringer out. Until all phones catch up with the sexiness of Spam Assassin and regular expressions, we must hack, and hack we shall! (God, when is some smart company going to finally let me flash my phone a regex formula for dealing with incoming calls. Seriously, someone please do it.) Thanks to the wonders of Caller ID and unique ring assignment, I set my cell phone’s ringer-type for nuisance call numbers to None. Not perfect, but it keeps me from needing to dash across the house to be greeted by a screech, a pitch, or a hangup.
  • Check mail anyplace - Alcor threw me a nice bone about Quicksilver yesterday. If you have the Mail.app plugin installed, add “~/Library/Application Support/Quicksilver/PlugIns/QS Apple Mail Module.qsplugin/Contents/Resources/Scripts” to your catalog and restart Quicksilver (CTRL-COMMAND-Q inside Quicksilver). On relaunch, you can type “Get New Mail” and “Open New Mail” from any app without changing focus. Handy.
  • Thanks - Many thanks to everybody who’s been picking up stuff via our MoleskineUS and Amazon affiliate links. The support is very much appreciated.
  • Happy Half-Year - I’m not really one for time-based celebrations, but I’ll note that this week marks the 6-month birthday of 43 Folders. Half a million happy nerds served. Thanks to everybody for everything, with special props to my peeps and extra special kudos to my lovely, patient, and supportive ladyfriend, Madeline. She is truly the 44th folder beneath my wings. Or something like that.

Now everybody go out, and buy yourselves something real pretty. And do have a lovely weekend.


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George Dick's picture

PhoneValet can run an applescript...

PhoneValet can run an applescript based on caller id info from incoming calls. Not sure if you could choose to not have it ring based on the this info… Might be worth looking into: you ought to be able to work regex into applescript… Just having my voicemail messages emailed to me got me hooked.

Todd Dailey's picture

Keep up the great work,...

Keep up the great work, Merlin. Happy sixth-month-versary! In celebration I picked up the first issue and a sub to Make using your Affiliate links. :)

Have you checked out http://www.rknet.it/program/delibar/ or http://tadalist.com/ - Chris Dibona was over and showed me tadalist - looks pretty cool!

Kevin Ballard's picture

Speaking of Oblique Strategies, have...

Speaking of Oblique Strategies, have you seen this: http://eno.sb.org/

It’s a page my dad has that has an Oblique Strategies generator - he has a text file with all the oblique strategies and it randomly picks them.

Swan's picture

Subject lines: I actually have...

Subject lines: I actually have the opposite experience. In the past, people could get by with subjects like “Hi”. But these days, with so much email coming in, they’d be too likely to be filtered out as junk, so they pay more attention to making them informative.

Silence the nuisance: Would be nice if it worked, but not feasible if you get calls from a foreign country. They usually don’t have caller ID or it is not translated correctly. Or they may even be using a call-by-call service to save costs, so they may show up on caller ID as some random 800 number or even a private caller, just like those annoying telemarketers.

Merlin Mann's picture

Swan: I have a very...

Swan: I have a very quiet ringtone of frogs croaking for unknown/out of area/no caller ID numbers, so, yeah, it still kind of does work. :-)

The Key's picture

I really like the creation...

I really like the creation of a “sickbox”. Perhaps one could create a list of items/strategies for different situations similar to the sick box? Sort of like an emergency planning kit, but tailored to different situations, such as moving (vital phone numbers, cleaning supplies, etc), or food preperation when one is in a hurry, etc.

Tyler Weir's picture

Adding useful text to the...

Adding useful text to the subject line is a great time saver. At work we commonly do something like this: “Working from home today: 555-555-1234 [nt]”

Where “[nt]” stands for “no text.” That way you tell the recipient they don’t even have to open it.

Peter Parkes's picture

For those of you who...

For those of you who were scratching your heads, trying to figure out how to add “~/Library/Application Support/Quicksilver/PlugIns/QS Apple Mail Module.qsplugin/Contents/Resources/Scripts” to your Quicksilver catalogue (you can’t do it from the standard directory dialog, because it’s inside a bundle) - just add an arbitrary folder, then click the little ‘info’ button to open the info drawer; you can then edit the path directly, and paste in the full path.

Paul Palinkas's picture

I've done the "sick box"...

I’ve done the “sick box” idea myself, but for air travel. I have put together travel-size kleenex, painkillers, decongestants, chewing gum and earplugs into a single ziploc, waiting for the next time I fly, so I don’t have to pay three times as much for these items at the airport.

Patrick's picture

At work we preface our...

At work we preface our email subjects with (A) or (I) to help keep the work down…

(A) = Action required (I) = Informational

About Merlin Mann

Merlin Mann's picture

Bio

Merlin Mann is an independent writer, speaker, and broadcaster. He’s best known for being the guy who started the website you’re reading right now. He lives in San Francisco, does lots of public speaking, and helps make cool things like You Look Nice Today. Also? He looks like this, answers questions, and has something like a life.

The best thing Merlin’s ever written is a short essay called, “Better.”

 
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Inbox Zero

The original 43 Folders series looking at the skills, tools, and attitude needed to empty your email inbox — and then keep it that way. Don’t miss the free video of Merlin’s Inbox Zero presentation.

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3-part series on attention management for artists and makers. Read Bad Correspondence, The Job You Think You Have, and One Clear Line.