Robot News
My Boss is a Robot: scientific experiment outsources the editorial process to Amazon Mechanical Turk; http://eicker.at/RobotNews
My Boss is a Robot: scientific experiment outsources the editorial process to Amazon Mechanical Turk; http://eicker.at/RobotNews
Hengl: Die Angst der Manager vor Social Media. Über die Furcht, Macht zu verlieren, und verpasste Chancen; http://eicker.at/21
Growing up digital, wired for distraction; http://eicker.at/1m vs. open ideas about utilizing technology; http://eicker.at/1n
Yammer will transform its microblogging solution into a full-fledged enterprise social network; http://j.mp/aOsFpS
Gardner: Everyone brings crumbs of knowledge to the task, if they do not, we are the lesser for it; http://j.mp/9hjTsa
Google: Priority Inbox for Gmail fights eMail overload by displaying emails in order of importance; http://j.mp/bLJVU1
WSJ: The end of management. Corporate bureaucracy is becoming obsolete; http://j.mp/c0ANnd (via @heinz)
Use Projecturf to manage projects and teams efficiently, and virtually from anywhere; http://j.mp/90qjUN
Great book summary by Josh Kaufman for Getting Things Done (GTD) by David Allen; http://j.mp/dBOJfo (via @pherwarth)
For implementing GTD you can use this web-based application: GTDagenda.com
You can use it to manage your goals, projects and tasks, set next actions and contexts, use checklists, schedules and a calendar.
Comes with a mobile version too, and with an Android app.
Thanks for sharing. Added a link.
Omni Group finally fixes its OmniFocus iPhone synchronisation in version 1.6: massive sync performance improvements.
Gleich mal runterladen und ausprobieren … :-)
Kaufman: Here are 10 big ideas from David Allen’s Getting Things Done…
1. If your day-to-day life is out of control, it’s almost impossible to think strategically or plan effectively.
2. Define what being ‘done’ looks like.
3. Mental work has five distinct phases: Collect, Process, Organize, Do, and Review
4. Get everything out of your head.
5. Projects and tasks are two different things: track them separately.
6. Focus on the Next Action required to move forward.
7. Use the ‘2 Minute Rule’ for small tasks.
8. Use Reference and Someday/Maybe files for things that have no immediate next actions.
9. Build a trusted system that helps you keep track of your commitments.
10. Schedule non-negotiable time for a Weekly Review.
Bonus tip: developing an effective personal productivity system takes time and experimentation.