it is more than just writing down your feelings/or venting frustrations, but is a way to reflect on your progress and work out how you can do better going forward
Bye Todoist… it’s not me, it’s you… | by Nadir Ait-Laoussine | Medium
So I’ve been an avid user of Todoist for nearly a decade. I started using Todoist in 2014 when Wunderlist was still in the picture. At the…
There is a broader point here about customer support. If you see it as simply a triaging system, then you’re likely going to land with the likes of Todoist and other companies that struggle with retaining customers. However, if you see customer support as an integral part of the customer journey, not just supporting the customer during moments of pain but also helping them get stronger, then you will retain customers for life who will find every opportunity to sing your praises.
Obsidian is a popular tool for managing notes in Markdown format. It is cross-platform, uses files direct from a file system location, and has some rather useful features, including a range of plugins created by the developers and the wider community. In this post I am going to walk you through how I have used some of the community plugins to give me better control over a feature known as workspaces.
• Downtime aids insights
• It helps recharge the energy needed to work deeply
• The work that evening downtime replaces is usually not that important
It's important to have a shutdown ritual, to ensure that every incomplete activity has been reviewed and that for each you have confirmed that either you have a plan you will follow for its completion, or it’s wirrten down and saved in a place where it will be revisited.
In order to have a deep work routine, you have to decide the following:
• Where you’ll work and for how long.
• How you’ll work once you start to work.
• How you’ll support your work.
• Monastic: isolate yourself for long periods of time without distractions; no shallow work allowed
• Bimodal: reserve a few consecutive days when you will be working like a monastic (you need at least one day a week)
• Rhythmic: take 3-4 hours every day to perform deep work on your project
• Journalistic: alternate your day between deep and shallow work as it fits your blocks of time (not recommended to try out first).
Knowledge workers usually lack explicit indicators of what it means to be productive and valuable at work, so they turn back toward an industrial indicator of productivity: doing multiple tasks in a visible manner.
• Deep work means those professional tasks that push your cognitive capabilities to their limit done in concentration mode (no distractions)
• Shallow work relates to the tasks that do not require much cognitive work (logistical-style tasks) performed while distracted most of the time. They don't bring much new value in the world and are easy to duplicate.
A Solution for the Mess of Online Bookmarking? – The Digital Orientalist
I believe that I am not the only person who often ends up having multiple tabs open on my browser after a day of falling into research rabbit holes. We click and click and before we know it, we hav…