matthewmcvickar + productivity   19

Quora: Hidden habits of ineffective people (by Chris Wake)
- Consuming more than you create
- Watching your own vanity metrics
- Starting the day responding to others
- Prioritizing the wrong activities
- Relying on multi-tasking to 'save time'
advice  productivity 
december 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Doodle
‘Easy scheduling.’

Create a poll, invite participants, and everyone agrees on the times they can meet. Brilliant. Via Merlin Mann in the 'Back to Work' podcast.
calendar  productivity  schedule  workflow 
april 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Brett Terpstra: Quick tip: AppleScript application toggle
Combine this small, easily customizable AppleScript with a keyboard shortcut utility (like FastScripts) to quickly toggle an application forward and back. I use this for Terminal and TaskPaper.
osx  software  productivity 
april 2011 by matthewmcvickar
BPS Research Digest: How to form a habit
"It seems the message of this research for those seeking to establish a new habit is to repeat the behaviour every day if you can, but don't worry excessively if you miss a day or two. Also be prepared for the long haul — remember the average time to reach peak automaticity was 66 days."

I wonder if it takes just as long to break a habit?
psychology  science  productivity  behavior 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
The New Yorker: What we can learn from procrastination
Noticing a theme here? I'm having serious productivity troubles right now, and I'm trying to trick myself out of them. "The philosopher Mark Kingwell puts it in existential terms: 'Procrastination most often arises from a sense that there is too much to do, and hence no single aspect of the to-do worth doing… Underneath this rather antic form of action-as-inaction is the much more unsettling question whether anything is worth doing at all.' In that sense, it might be useful to think about two kinds of procrastination: the kind that is genuinely akratic and the kind that’s telling you that what you’re supposed to be doing has, deep down, no real point. The procrastinator’s challenge, and perhaps the philosopher’s, too, is to figure out which is which."
productivity  psychology 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Paul Graham: Good and Bad Procrastination
"If you want to work on big things, you seem to have to trick yourself into doing it. You have to work on small things that could grow into big things, or work on successively larger things, or split the moral load with collaborators. It's not a sign of weakness to depend on such tricks. The very best work has been done this way."
productivity  psychology  work  advice 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
You Are Not So Smart: Procrastination
"Capable psychonauts who think about thinking, about states of mind, about set and setting, can get things done not because they have more will power, more drive, but because they know productivity is a game of cat and mouse versus a childish primal human predilection for pleasure and novelty which can never be excised from the soul. Your effort is better spent outsmarting yourself than making empty promises through plugging dates into a calendar or setting deadlines for push ups."
productivity  psychology  science  health 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
WIRED: Nicholas Carr: The Web Shatters Focus, Rewires Brains
Written with the opinion that this is necessarily a Bad Thing. Revisit; this is interesting.
brain  culture  health  internet  neuroscience  productivity  science 
june 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Instapaper Blog: dschoon’s customer review of Instapaper Pro in the App Store
This is exactly why Instapaper is so incredible: "Instapaper makes me more productive, everywhere. On my desktop it dismisses distractions. On the go it transmutes idle time to knowledge. It remembers things I forget, but it has never become a new todo entry on my list. If all my apps had this power, I would be utterly unstoppable."
instapaper  software  review  productivity 
april 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Freedom
"Freedom is an application that disables networking on an Apple computer for up to eight hours at a time." Only restarting can circumvent the time limit you've sent.
free  osx  productivity  focus  lifehack  software 
may 2009 by matthewmcvickar
Technology Review: Blogs: Ed Boyden's Blog: How to Think
Stressing the importance of actively engaging everything that you take in and the way that you take it in, so you can synthesize and maximize and!
technology  inspiration  education  creativity  lifehack  psychology  productivity  ideas  mind  brain  thinking  learning 
december 2008 by matthewmcvickar
Derek Sivers: Tim Ferriss interview
On "shortening your workweek" in every way: outsourcing, clever promotion techniques, social engineering, and focusing on the right things.
lifehacks  work  business  inspiration  interview  marketing  productivity  time  life 
september 2008 by matthewmcvickar
Paul Graham: You Weren't Meant to Have a Boss
On why entrepreneurs and health food nuts are living right, and cubiclones are missing something. "In an artificial world, only extremists live naturally."
advice  business  nature  productivity  programming  startup 
march 2008 by matthewmcvickar
10 simple ways to save yourself from messing up your life
Or so says this guy. Basically, stop feeling sorry for yourself and getting wrapped up in your moods -- just go go go!
advice  lifehack  inspiration  philosophy  productivity  psychology 
december 2007 by matthewmcvickar
Paul Graham: Holding a Program in One's Head
On programming well. Devote time to it, rewrite it completely, work without distraction. Echoes of "Getting Real."
programming  productivity  writing  inspiration  webdevelopment 
august 2007 by matthewmcvickar
43 Folders: The strange allure (and false hope) of email bankruptcy
Some people with too many emails to handle have chosen to give up on the stack entirely.
email  productivity  culture  mail  communication 
june 2007 by matthewmcvickar

Copy this bookmark:



description:


tags: