![]() You just turn your head, move you hands and jot things down without interrupting your work flow as badly as searching for your journal app then getting hung up on where to organize a snippet, note, event date, etc… your screen stays set up and focused on your work. The thing about keeping most things on paper is that you don’t then have to swap screens all the time, or add another app to the list of apps you’re juggling on your desktop. That way I don’t have to have a dedicated terminal window open to use it and I don’t even have to close, it I just click back to where I’m working and the terminal goes away. I have iTerm2 set up with HotKey to open a guake-like terminal overlay so that I can hit a key, down drops the terminal frmo the top of my screen, type task add blah blah blah then the key again to make the terminal go away. Then for just plain old tasks I use TaskWarrior, as it sort of gets out of your way and you don’t have to have a GUI open, just a terminal somewhere. I have a _scratch folder at the top of my projects folder I dump that stuff into loosely organized into folders by topic/context, that gets synced to Amazon S3 periodically. If it’s something I need to catalog somewhere like snippets, or links, etc. Then a notebook with really nice paper (blank pages) and a nice pen to jot down notes throughout the day into. ![]() ![]() I have a Hobonichi Techo Planner that I carry with me everywhere that I make a point of reviewing every morning and updating. ![]() I still really like paper for the most part. ![]()
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