| bio | website | |
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| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year, 11 months |
| seen | Sep 24 '12 at 22:22 | |
| stats | profile views | 4 |
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Nov 18 |
awarded | Notable Question |
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Jun 30 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Jun 23 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Dec 4 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Nov 17 |
comment |
Arranging next actions to figure out what to do next I have great difficulty making this work in Excel without add-ons. To replicate my difficulty, just copy the table above and click "Insert->Chart->Scatter". Is there some trick? |
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Nov 16 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Sep 9 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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Sep 9 |
answered | How to plan my weekend so I do more useful work? |
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Sep 9 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Sep 9 |
accepted | Being productive without energy |
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Sep 9 |
accepted | Arranging next actions to figure out what to do next |
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Sep 8 |
comment |
How to present my work overload to others Extended for over a year, and actually, the people in question are already getting on the same page about possible solutions. I just have trouble explaining the causes of the problem. I do technical work so a list of my tasks becomes meaningless when passed up the chain of command; I need better ways to pass something up the chain that remains meaningful. |
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Sep 6 |
answered | I have burned out, what is best way to fix it? |
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Sep 5 |
comment |
How to present my work overload to others I like how the tasks flow from left to right; it makes the progress feel faster somehow. |
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Sep 3 |
answered | Handling delayed delegating in GTD |
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Sep 3 |
revised |
Handling delayed delegating in GTD edited tags |
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Sep 3 |
asked | How to present my work overload to others |
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Sep 3 |
answered | How to define GTD contexts at work? |
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Aug 24 |
comment |
Arranging next actions to figure out what to do next +1 because this is what I'm already doing, and this works well for tracking more carefully the 5-10 things that end up being selected. After reading the link, I think my current goal is actually a bit anti-ZTD---how to more easily keep an eye out on all 80 items, including the 70 "less-essential" ones. |
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Aug 24 |
comment |
Arranging next actions to figure out what to do next Although importance and difficulty both tend to change a lot, it is really nice to see ways like this to arrange a lot of tasks into a graph. Thanks for the suggestions! |