by Wendy Boswell I've had the pleasure of working exclusively from home for a few years now. I love it because I can do what I love workwise, but still be a fulltime mom to my three kiddos under eleven. However, my spouse and I have come up against this problem: how do you balance life, work, and family when one person is working within the relative freedom of a freelance work schedule, and the ot
PHP developer Rainer Bernhardt built a useful web app called iCommit that manages his tasks, projects and goals Getting Things Done style. iCommit includes all the essential parts of David Allen's system: contexts, next actions, a tickler, the inbox, and multi-task projects. You can grab and go a day's worth of activities and also do your weekly review right inside the app. It took me some time to
Carleton University's Procrastination Research Group boils down how to stop putting off all the things you have to do to 8 pretty simple steps. Make a list of everything you have to do.Write an intention statement .Set realistic goals.Break it down.Make your task meaningful.Promise yourself a reward.Eliminate tasks you never plan to do.Estimate the amount of time you think it will take you to comp
52 projects has some ideas that'll help you get more writing done. It's all about getting started. Stop talking about your novel or short story ideas and start writing. Get in the habit of writing for at least an hour every day, no matter what. One strategy is to get up an hour earlier than you have to, make yourself a cup of coffee and completely focus on your writing. That's a great idea. Any Li
I got the chance to play with an IBM ThinkPad that dual boots Windows XP and Mac OS 10.4 (the "Intellese" version). It felt like I was in the twilight zone seeing the shiny Mac interface on a black IBM laptop. Running Mac OS on non-Apple hardware isn't Apple's intention with 10.4, but now that it's possible, surely a community will spring up around the possibilities - and hopefully get their hands
Loyal reader Felix Valenzuela writes in with this tip for changing routinely-used folder icons to speed up your navigation of heavily populated folders. Here s how to do it: Use Windows Explorer to open up the folder containing the folder you d like to change.Next, right-click the folder you d like to change and select Properties.Click on the Customize tab.Click on Change IconNow, you can either s
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