Removing obstacles

September 26, 2008 at 2:58 pm

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One of the most important aspects of being able to do the things that you want is being able to remove obstacles from your path. If you are able to do this well, you will be able to get a lot more done.

There are three main ways of removing obstacles from your path.

Turn Back!

Turn Back!

1. Change the path you are walking.

In simple terms this means letting the fact there is an obstacle determine that you are no longer going to walk that route. The effort needed to overcome the obstacle is more than you are willing to expend in order to reach the final result.

Note that this is a perfectly legitimate response where the outcome is not that important to you, or the effort required is too great for you to be able to cope with at this point in your life.

2. Walk around the obstacle.

Walking Around

This is a technique that can be used where the end result is more important than the means of getting there. For instance, if there is a road accident up ahead, it would be most sensible to find a different route to get to your destination instead of turning back, or trying to drive straight through the accident point. You arrive at the same destination, but have taken a slightly different route to get there from the one you desired.

3. Move the obstacle.

Moving Rocks

This may be potentially the most effort, but also likely the most rewarding, simply because the outcome is worth the effort of moving the obstacle. If you imagine being in a car with a few friends driving down a country lane, when suddenly you encounter a tree that has fallen in the middle of the road. You pull to a stop, jump out of the car and go to work hauling the tree out of the way so you can continue your journey. That tree will (probably) not bother you the next time you drive down that road.

All of the above assumes that you are using the achievement-as-journey metaphor, which of course you may not be doing. I would be interested to see how other people frame problems, how they look at obstacles, and what metaphors they use.

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Escape pod

September 25, 2008 at 5:17 pm

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I just thought that I should mention the great Escape Pod. This is a sci-fi podcast, which has such classics as Nightfall by Isaac Asimov

If you like sci-fi stories and are interested in listening to them in an audio podcast, you will absolutely love Escape Pod.

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Omnifocus for iPhone/iPod Touch

September 25, 2008 at 2:57 pm

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Omnifocus for iPhone

Omnifocus for iPhone

I have recently started using Omnifocus on my iPod Touch in order better manage my tasks. What follows is a short review of the application - what it does well, where it could be improved and my general impressions of it.

Firstly, from the Omnifocus site itself to give you an idea of what the application does, and what it is designed for.

“OmniFocus for the iPhone brings task management to your fingertips. Keep track of actions by project, place, person, or date. Bring up a shopping list, agenda items to discuss at work, tasks for home, and any other lists you need.

Using your location, OmniFocus can create a custom list of actions to complete nearby. Buying groceries? OmniFocus can show you the closest grocery store and create an instant shopping list.

Capture tasks anywhere, anytime with OmniFocus: you can enter text, take a picture, or even make a quick voice recording.

Synchronize OmniFocus with your Mac using the OS X version available separately from omnigroup.com/omnifocus.”

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Quote of the Day

September 13, 2008 at 3:39 pm

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“A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.” Robert A. Heinlein

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Managing Information Overload (Part 1)

September 10, 2008 at 6:21 pm

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“We have for the first time an economy based on a key resource [information] that is not only renewable, but self-generating. Running out of it is not a problem, but drowning in it is.”John Naisbitt, author of Megatrends.

This quote from John Naisitt illustrates how much of a problem information overload is for today’s culture.We live in a world that now has a potentially unlimited amount of self-perpetuating videos, media and writing all available at the click of a mouse. This generation has more information available to it than any other previous generation could have dreamt of.

In this short, but hopefully informative series I will show you some ways in which you can avoid the fire-hose of information that is blasting you from all directions, and show how you can keep yourself sane, whilst still being able to enjoy life.

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The almost compulsory Google Chrome post

September 3, 2008 at 5:23 pm

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view of Google's new browser

Google Chrome

Google Chrome was released yesterday for windows, and google have promised that Linux and Mac versions are in the pipeline. I downloaded it on my laptop and played about with it for around 1/2 an hour.

Initial impressions are that it is very fast and doesn’t seem to hang up on flash content quite as much as Firefox, rendering being very similar to Safari’s (being based off WebKit, this is to be expected), but I did not see anything really compelling that would make me switch to it when the Linux version comes out.

I’m sure that I will download the Linux version and play about with it when it finally makes it way out of the googleplex, but in this particular incarnation, I think that there is very little that it offers over firefox and safari - certainly nothing worth writing home about. Your opinion may vary from this depending on how important flash is to you, whether you run Linux, and whether you rely on Firefox extensions. Still it looks better than the IE8 beta in terms of memory usage.

Edit: Security vulnerability in Chrome has been found already.

As usual please post your thoughts on Google’s new baby below.

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