Tag: evernote (page 1 of 1)

No One App to Rule Them All

I have been searching for an app to replace Evernote for quite some time now. Although I thought Notion was the one, I eventually gave up after using it for nearly two years as it was too heavy for personal use.

First, I stopped using it to capture my “read later” links. Instead, I used bookmarks and read later in Safari until I stumbled across Anybox in a newsletter or blog post. Since then, I’ve been bookmarking everything I read in Anybox. It works across all my devices and browsers, helping me stay synced between my personal and work laptops.

Recently, I started using Apple Notes as a primary rather than occasional tool. I use it as my journal and for storing digital keepsakes. I’m still exploring its features and learning to use smart tags to my advantage.

My awareness of the relative ease and utility of Notes began as my family collaborated more in keeping track of my dad’s Cancer treatment. We shared documents where we captured his systems and care plans, wrote official messages from the family, and even managed memorial service planning together over the last few weeks.

At work, I use Google Workspace for writing meeting notes, making to-do lists, and planning. It has many new features, and they’ve made it quite enjoyable to quickly draft or insert meeting notes or documents or tag someone into something.

I’m also using Habitify to track my habits. It’s a paid app, but not a subscription, with a one-time fee to unlock all features. It does the data visualizations I was missing before, and it’s cute and simple to set up. Tiffany goes with paper, though, because apps be snitchin’.

Today, I recreated my run tracker in Sheets after exporting and transforming the data I kept in Notion. It now presents my data precisely as I want, and I can tweak it when my needs change.

I have learned that I don’t need one perfect app to rule them all. Most apps have gotten very good at doing one thing or a limited suite of similar tasks well, and separating these tasks makes it much easier to switch or sample other things instead of worrying about the sunk costs in one über-app.

My Desktop, My Mind

“People should see how we’re living.”Lorde, Buzzcut Season

I made this revelation on twitter today:

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I was sure this was a boring tweet. A meaningless little victory of efficiency for me that had no bearing on anyone else. I was wrong. It sparked a conversation for the rest of the morning about mac setups and app choices and the approach to work.

It was sparked, for me, by this MacWorld article. I was surprised to see how many people don’t use things I use on the regular and how unique our setups are. This line was the most fascinating:

I sort the apps in my Dock by color, because my brain remembers where things are by where they fall on the color spectrum.

— Faith Korpi

What?! Perhaps our desktops are windows into our minds.

So, here, let me open the blinds…


Fullscreen_11_6_13__5_23_PM.pngFullscreen_11_6_13__5_23_PM.png

I’m currently using a 13 in. Macbook Air. At work, I have a large monitor that I use as a second screen. At home, I mostly stick with just the laptop screen although, occassionally, I use my iPad as a second screen using Air Display and, once in a blue moon, I’ll use our gigantor HDTV just because I can but that’s just me being silly.

As of today, I have my dock exposed and mounted to the left side. Previously it was docked at the bottom and hidden. So far, I like this new placement.

My dock is sorted by apps in order of usage and only features apps I use regularly. I use Chrome, Rdio, my mail program (as of today, trying out postbox), iCal, tweetbot, and evernote most. I just recently bought the MS Office suite after tiring of having to convert my beloved Keynote presentations into less awesome powerpoints that I couldn’t fix after conversion without opening a different laptop. When I’m at work, these all are open on the laptop screen.

My desktop stays pristine. I do not leave files up here.

On the second monitor, I place my browser windows. Usually a standard chrome window and a chrome incognito. If I’m testing something, firefox and safari will go over here, too.

I use full screen apps on both monitors (thanks Mavericks) and do a lot of swiping.

I use Launchpad a lot, too. I’m learning to use Spotlight more but it doesn’t come to mind first.

I use a program called EVE to remind me to use keystrokes over mouse strokes. This is a habit I’ve found hard to break.

Wallpaper is by Sam Ellis and from The Desktop Wallpaper Project.

So, that’s me.

What’s your brain, uh,  desktop like?

 

Finding The Spark

“I’ll be saving myself from the ruin.”Elle Goulding, I Know You Care

[M]ost good ideas (whether they’re ideas for narrative structure, a particular twist in the argument, or a broader topic) come into our minds as hunches: small fragments of a larger idea, hints and intimations. Many of these ideas sit around for months or years before they coalesce into something useful, often by colliding with another hunch. […] The problem with hunches is that it’s incredibly easy to forget them, precisely because they’re not fully-baked ideas.

Steven Johnson, The Spark File

My spark file isn’t long enough. On a morning like this one when I wake without inspiration, I need that spark and the few items in my evernote file just aren’t doing it for me.

In the past, I’ve kept multiple separate files for inspiration but I like Steven Johnson’s suggesting of keeping one long file full of good and bad hunches that might allow you to see a through-line of your thoughts. This happens for me when I go back and read through my blog archives or journal. 

So, in absence of a spark, I’m going to work on the Spark File. 

Let’s start September engaged, inspired, and ready to create.

2013 and I’ve Got Air Coming Through My Nose!

“And I know my days are numbered just the same as everyone but I found out that life without love is just no fun.” Annette Poindexter, Wayward Dream

A month ago, I resolved to dream. In the month since, I’ve tried to do as much of that as I could in between big life events, travel, and just everything.  And nothing. In the course, and not through any plan on my part, I feel like I’ve matured. I understand a bit more about life and the part I see myself playing.

I also read C.C. Chapman’s Amazing Things Will Happen and did a few of the exercises he suggested in finding my direction for this moment. The most effective of these were those that asked me to write some things down in a notebook (or in my case, type them in my evernote journal) and revisit them and think about them until I found the thread tying my thoughts and feelings and ideas together into something cohesive. I thought of it as finding the beat. Catching the rhythm. 

So, at this moment, for 2013, I have come up with the following as my goals/tasks for the year:


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Essentially, I want to be a part of making awesome things that people I respect and admire will respect and admire. I plan to do this both professionally and personally. With Examiner.com. With Menu & Hours. With Taproot. With an idea that started tumbling around in my head this week. Hold me to it.

Be More Invested

  • In the lives of those I love
  • In the moment
  • In my own well-being

Go Outside and See, Do, Live.

My monitors are a cage. Gilded ones that I find great value in but the world is out there. Peace of mind, clarity of thought, and little moments of magic are much more likely out of doors. And, when I’m outside, head up, eyes wide open, I’m reminded I’m alive.

If I need a kick in the pants, I will come back to this post, read the above, watch below, and keep it movin’. Let’s go!