Drew McCormack on GTD for scientists
Getting Things Done (GTD) for Scientists - MacResearch
I enjoyed this post by Drew McCormack on how he discovered GTD and has started using it for his work as a scientist:
The thing to realize is that most people don’t get lessons in organizing themselves at school or college, and they certainly haven’t been prepared for the rapid pace of modern life. GTD is nothing more than a few lessons on how best to organize things. At the center of it all is what could be regarded as a multi-dimensional ToDo list. The idea is to get every project you have, however big or small, out of your head and into the list. That allows you to relax about things, and be more productive at the same time.
“Multi-dimensional ToDo list.” I’m totally stealing that.
Also, I mention it here because this post provides that rarest of voyeuristic nerdthrill: getting to peek at how someone else is using Kinkless!
Any tips or stories from the science nerds out there on how GTD is and isn’t working for you?
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Thanks, I love seeing job...
Thanks, I love seeing job focused GTD methods. What I’d really like to see is how someone in a Design and QA Engineering role uses GTD. I cannot seem to get his working with constant tasks, projects, assignments, and hot issues landing in my lap. Of course they are all due yesterday and next week and require lots of hand holding when you delegate tasks.
Oh, crap am I managing projects?