Think.
Youâve got a TO DO list. Do you have a TO BE list?
almost home
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
đŞź
Misplaced Lens Cap

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Cosimo Galluzzi

Product Placement

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
will byers stan first human second
Claire Keane
occasionally subtle

izzy's playlists!

tannertan36

Origami Around
styofa doing anything
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Mike Driver
Cosmic Funnies
One Nice Bug Per Day
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

seen from United States

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seen from United States
seen from Brazil
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seen from Germany
seen from United States

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@lauraberk
Think.
Youâve got a TO DO list. Do you have a TO BE list?
a winter haiku
Burrowed into plush folds of sweaters, eyes touch. Hold Iâm fixed on you, love.
Churches are just really successful book clubs.
(Something Iâve always thought but am always a little too scared to say aloudâŚ)
The most powerful storytelling in the world to shape humanity. Billions subscribe to the history, but how many question the authorsâ true motivation for writing (and editing) the stories? No book...well now that would mean an uncertainty thatâs too hard to face. The book gives a believer scaffolding for living.
Stumbled across this girl via my Spotify Discover Weekly feed. This girl - Maggie Rogers - has done a wondrous thing combining folk music with a dance beat and light, airy vocals. Addicted.
...things are most compelling when they are allowed to be exactly what they are...That means that the designerâs job is to make things even more what they already are.
https://design.blog/2016/09/29/ian-bogost-play-anything/
Wow, what a simple concept.
Design is about defining the contours of a thing as precisely and authentically as possible so as to reveal that thing to be fully actualized. Itâs not about adding bells & whistles, superfluous trappings that veil the thingâs reality. Itâs about respecting a thingâs core being, with all its limitations, while innovating on how to show that core.
Meditation is like a shower for the mind.
A guy named David
To be young and free
âBells & whistles, the whole nine yards, all colors of the rainbow, all of the things.â Bay to Breakers is a cacophony of color and sound that envelops you in its own playful, charming way. The San Francisco way. Itâs one of the few days of the year that adults across the city swarm together in a river of skin rubbing against skin, expressing their full being without rules, question, or judgement.
There are smiles right and left and up and down. Straight men comfortable in ripped booty shorts and neon tights printed with kittens. Girls in their early twenties push the boundaries of their sexuality, exploring what a shirt thatâs a wee bit tighter feels like as they flaunt their shiny spirits along the panhandle, getting hugs and high fives as they soak in the Sunday sun.
Iâm in the thick of what feels like the most over-educated, high-achieving, attractive, fit crowd of throbbing millennials - all just living, happy to be alive. Being whomever they want to be.
And in two hours they will slip back into their quiet houses and, after a sleep, the monotoned rhythm of a serious adult life.
Stars are like fireflies caught in molasses
Adaptation of lines from Derek Walcottâs poem Names
A first world problem
Distraction from overstimulation may be my greatest weakness at the moment. I find myself constantly scrolling through event feeds on Facebook and music & arts venue sites. And I find that there are too many channels of information that I want to stay caught up with; everything from the New York Times to Mediumâs top daily articles to the tantalizing list that Pocket sends me a couple of times a week. But I just canât do it all - I canât read it all. Knowing, though, that there are interesting articles that may go unread, tidbits of knowledge that may go unabsorbed, indie films that may go unwatched because tickets were sold out two weeks ago - all of that, makes my brain distracted and wound up.
I used to firmly believe that information in the twenty-first century was becoming more and more atomized. News & thoughts & event feeds seemed to exist in silos; information streamed in parallel fashion, encouraging gated communities of thinking, But now, with social media, we're caught in a daily crossfire of news, real photos and edited photos, videos, articles summaries, VR stories, blog posts + their comments, infographics, and Tweets -- all of which appear (momentarily) via an ever-increasing buffet of information aggregators.
I canât be the only one who combats a small rush of anxiety on Sunday nights when I realize I havenât consumed every ounce of interesting info my eyeballs have come across over the weekend.
Iâm resolved to pare down the list of information sources that I currently use to keep abreast of current news and city happenings. That way I can maintain a sense of calmness about not being able to ingest everything. Itâs just not possible!
Here are the information sources I currently canât live without:
Podcasts: This American Life, Freakonomics, Planet Money, Only Human, Death Sex & Money
The NYTimes. Yes, all of it.
The Farnam Street Brain Food email
Pocketâs recommended weekly articles
Humans of New York photo blog
The Atlanticâs Cities section
WSJ articles my family sends around on politics, the economy & international news
Richer countries tend to be less religious than poorer nations. The only outliers of this observation were China and the United States...Worldwide, six out of 10 people say that they are religious. Most believers can be found in Africa and the Middle East where eight out of 10 people would consider themselves to be religious.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2015/04/14/map-these-are-the-worlds-least-religious-countries/?wpisrc=nl_az_most
The more data like this thatâs published, the more I contemplate the purpose of religion. I fascinate over the question, Why do people believe? This data is another argument for religion being useful as an ideological haven. Humans who cannot find faith in their political regime, economic opportunities, and physical communities turn to religion as a safe space. When thereâs nobody and nothing around you that you can trust, you turn to religion & God. At the core, humans want more than anything to belong, to have strong social connections. But when Maslowâs hierarchy of needs cannot be met, believing in a higher power is a compelling way to maintain hope. Better to believe in something instead of nothing.
So we see that many of the poorest countries with the greatest societal strife and poverty are deeply embedded in religiosity. And this intense - sometimes extreme - belief often leads to even worse societal outcomes. Humansâ deep faith enables them to tolerate & push through difficult lives, yet, the difficulty often worsens because belief becomes so powerful that humans identify strongest with their religious identity rather than the universally shared identity of being human.
Oh man, itâs only been a couple of weeks, but I already really miss New Zealand beauty. The peace, cold calm water.....my dreams take me back.
Don't drown in email! How to use Gmail more efficiently.
I usually I blog about Angellist, Startups, Founders, the Future and especially Metrics but I have shown this âlifehackâ to so many people that I thought itâs worth itâs own blogpost. Hope itâs useful.
If you struggle with keeping on top of your emails in Gmail you want to maybe try my setup. Itâs hard for me to lose track and trust me - i am easy to distract
This is how i use Gmail since 2010:
GTD - Getting things done
An easy to manage, usually empty inbox on the left
All âtodosâ in the first box
All emails âawaiting a replyâ in the second
All âdelegatedâ emails in the third
All emails related to meetings, flights, etc easy to find in the fourth
All done with 0 plugins, using only standard gmail features
Itâs hard to lose overview using that setup
I couldnât even imagine using gmail any other way. No seriously. I see those messy priority inbox tab inbox systems and I am just scared. Scared that google will someday force me to use those features.
Btw: This approach is not particularly new. I learned it from a person (forgot name) at LeWeb 2010 and it was mentioned on a blogpost which was called âGmail Ninjaâ (couldnât find the link).
How I manage daily work
An email comes in
Handle those you can instantly
The others mark as todo
If you want to keep track of them when you replied, you mark them as âAwaiting Replyâ or âDelegatedâ (that way you can always quickly find them and follow up)
You archive all emails
You inbox on the left is empty again
All important ones are in the special boxes ones the right
Example:
Received an email
Was able to reply instantly (if i wouldnât have had the time i would marked it as yellow bang (Todo))
I replied
Marked with âawaiting replyâ (question mark)
Archived the email
The email is no longer in my inbox but in my âawaiting reply listâ on the right side
His reply will come into my inbox (and we start over with replying instantly or marking as action)
Archive - Inbox Zero
Thatâs it! You are done.
Hope fully that workflow also helps you.
Interested? - It takes about 15minutes to set upâŚ
⌠but might change how you work with email forever ;)
In a nutshell itâs
Multiple inboxes
Special stars
The multiple inboxes have searches matching the special stars
Several filters to avoid repetitive tasks
Step by Step guide
Add multiple inboxes
Go to Settings (you will find it under the cogs icon on the top right)
Go to Labs
Enable Multiple Inboxes
Choose right side layout
Choose the correct special stars
Go to Settings > General
Scroll down to Stars
Add the stars you will want to use
I use:
Yellow bang for Todo
Red bang for Important Todo
Question mark for emails I expect or await a reply. (so i can followup)
Orange guillemet (double arrow) for emails i delegated to someone but expect to be done. (so i can follow up)
Purple star for any arranged meeting, flights, event tickets, call or anything else related to an event where i might need to find that stuff quickly.
Filter the inboxes to match the stars
Go to Settings > Multiple Inboxes
Switch to right side layout - the option is in the bottom (!)
Add the filter rules you want for your inboxes
Here is the list of all names of the stars:
has:red-star
has:orange-star
has:green-star
has:blue-star
has:purple-star
has:red-bang
has:orange-guillemet
has:yellow-bang
has:green-check
has:blue-info
has:purple-question
You can btw also do more complex filters by adding OR, AND or basically anything else you can use in search. Eg. I use OR to show both important and VERY important todos.
Note on mobile: If you use the mobile Gmail App a lot i would suggest to use the normal yellow star for todo. That way you can at least mark todos in mobile. Unfortunately the other features wonât work as well because the gmail app doesnât support them.
Enable the inbox layout (aka kill the tabs ;) )
This part is a bit annoying - basically you need to disable a lot of fancy default features of gmail. If the new multiple inbox layout doesnât appear in your inbox after you finished the guide you might have missed some step here.
Go to Settings > Inbox
Switch to âdefaultâ
Turn off any configuration you might have regarding tabs
Turn off any configuration regarding priority, important emails or filters
Go to your inbox
Click on the cog and click on âConfigure Inboxâ
Remove everything
And while you are at it: Switch layout to âcompactâ
Now reload
Getting to inbox zero the first time
Let me guess you got a lot of emails in front of you right now or? I had several thousands the first time.
You need to get from several thousands it to Inbox Zero. And this needs to happen now. But itâs actually quite easy.
Go through the first two or three pages of email.
Mark everything that is a todo with a todo icon (in my case yellow bang).
Every thread where you had the last email and await a reply mark with your awaiting reply icon (in my case question mark).
The same for your delegated and events emails.
When you went through the first two or three pages and you have the feeling nothing (still) important appears anymore do the daring move.
Click select all (the checkbox on the top left)
Confirm that you really mean all 6523 emails
And click on archive
Now your inbox should at zero and your right areas full.
More Gmail Workflow Tips
If you like the suggestion above you might be also interested in my other gmail workflow tips:
Robot the majority of your emails
I am pretty sure you receive dozens of newsletters, groups etc.
Unsubscribe what you donât need
Filter what you only need if you search for it (i do this eg for follower updates etc)
Filter everything that can be automatically processed (eg all my invoices get a label, all my commercial invoices get a label and are forwarded to my assisstent who will then use it for bookkeeping)
By now i have over 100 filters and i only see new emails if i really need to see them.
Keyboard navigation
Enable shortcuts in settings
Learn them
Most important y for archive, r for reply, a for reply all, s for star
Auto advance
Choose auto-advance in Settings so you can cycle through your new emails in the morning really fast
Undo sending
Enable Undo send in Settings > Labs
Wonder for the rest of your life why this is not a default feature
Merge your email accounts to one
Screw multiple logins
Fetch all your email to your main gmail account
Be sure to use the âsmtpâ feature to avoid the emails being send as âon behalf ofâ
Choose to always reply from the email you got the message sent to
Ideal if you have private and professional emails coming now to the same inbox
Install rapportive. But i am pretty sure you already have done so. ;)
Update:
A few people mentioned that they suggest using labels instead of stars. Labels are accessible in the mobile app and also in other apps.
Personally I prefer the stars because they are quicker to access. But if you are looking for a way to have the same workflow also accessible in your mobile - labels might be the solution.
Thatâs it.
I hope this workflow helps you as much as it helped me and several people i showed it too - If you want please tweet this article. And also feel free to hit me up on twitter if you have any further questions or suggestions how to improve my workflow: @andreasklinger
Until then, lifehack the planet,
Andreas
The best blog post Iâve ever read on Tumblr. Changed my productivity and email organization a thousand fold. I send this post to any person who complains about their inbox being too much for them.
The bounty from my volunteer day at Alameny Farm. Felt so good to get my hands into the dirt, unplug from technology, pay attention to the detail of leaves, roots, and mulch. Dinner for the next few days will be mighty meaningful :)
OY / YO
LOVE this:Â http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/11/nyregion/a-sculpture-with-something-to-say-lands-in-brooklyn-bridge-park.html
This oneâs for all the managers out there.
I wrote my first blog post on Medium last night. After a couple years of discovering various confessions from VegasTech entrepreneurs on Medium, I decided to give it a whirl. Iâll be cross-posting for a while to see what does or doesnât happen!
soft songs
Bon Iver songs have this way of making me feel overwhelmingly reflective, sentimental, emotional...drawing up images and moments and feelings from the past. His voice is haunting and calming at once. It makes me think of sitting in a field surrounded by tall grass and a blowing wind, with something off in the distance that you canât quite catch.
a haiku
sun gleam, mind racing
what's next? living up out wide!
a new beginning