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Last seen in: Nottingham, UK
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- Forty mins before we were due to arrive in Manchester and still not left the gate in Philly. Everyone far too tired to be cross. 2 weeks ago
- After 1am and still at airport (flight should have departed 2040). Another plane has been found apparently. 2 weeks ago
- So far, no progress. 90mins sitting at gate and now off the plane (mechanical problems). Two hours until we know if the plane can fly. 2 weeks ago
- Second attempt to get to PHL successful. Fingers crossed for leg back to UK. 2 weeks ago
- Still in Toronto and my PHL to UK flight has already departed. 2 weeks ago
- Nice meeting at York Uni, now US3763/US734 back to UK. 2 weeks ago
- US4187/US4050 NYC->PHL->YYZ for more research meetings. Oddly couple hundred US$ cheaper than US4050 alone. 2010-06-30
- More than an hour queuing at US immigration then processed in a minute or so. 2010-06-23
- Maybe leaving 30 mins early! 2010-06-23
- Back at Manchester Airport for flight US735 to Philadelphia and the SASE conference. 2010-06-23
- More updates...
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Organising
I have spent some time this last week thinking and playing with to-do list management methods and software (and, perhaps more importantly, thinking about how to manage different tasks across different projects).
I have for some time been using OmniFocus. The application builds on the (famous) “getting things done (GTD)” method of having contexts for work and projects. I’m experimenting with the method in a slightly unusual way, having created a number of contexts that relate to my mode or mindset for work (such as administration, teaching and research) or personal activities (such as shopping (for grocery and household goods).
These contexts contain activities that i can do in clusters reasonable efficiently (e.g., admin typically contains tasks that I can do at home or office, on the computer with each requiring relatively little concentration). Teaching tasks are much the same, but require a different mindset (focused on pedagogy, use files in a different part of my computer, etc). Some projects require tasks to be undertaken sequentially others in parallel and this can me noted.
For each context, I am developing a view (or perspective) so that they are grouped and sorted in logical bundles (with admin sorted by due date, research by project, shopping by category of goods, etc).
I am also trying the iPod Touch / iPhone version of the software, which syncs with the copy on my Mac so that I have my to-do list with me to add tasks and mark them as complete as necessary.
I have yet to fully explore the follow-up capabilities. This is important when we either depend on others’ actions before we can continue, or where we need regular contact with people (who are likely to be as busy as we are). I have marked some activities as periodic, so I’ll see how that works.