Archive for the ‘MacLove’ Category

Eternity, Time Management, and Your iPhone

November 26th, 2009

I loathe time management.   Keeping time sheets and records of my time is one of those tasks that I have never done very well.   It’s probably because I am lazy and enjoy the “unstructured, high-energy, creative work environment” of entrepreneurial companies.   But, my better, rational half, knows that I am just bullshitting myself.    Accomplishing a lot in the precious few hours we are granted each day takes discipline and careful attention to how one uses one’s time.

I was reminded of this by the truly excellent article by Rob May called “How to Be an Effective Entrepreneur”.   Rob spins Drucker’s The Effective Executive into a set of guidelines for effective entrepreneurship, and does it well.   To my horror, the first rule in Rob’s article is “Know They Time”, and he begins with a quote from Jean de la Bruyere:

Those who make the worst use of their time are the first to complain of its shortness.

Ouch!

So, I put my tail between my legs and realized that being more effective will need to start with me trying to battle some age-old prejudices about time management.  And, when faced with a new problem that needs to be solved, there is only one effective approach: find a new toy!

Eternity: Weekly time log chart

Eternity: Weekly time log chart

Hardly a toy, I found an extremely useful iPhone app called Eternity Time Log from Komorian.   Most time logging applications are designed to address the problem of billing clients for parcels of time, and there are dozens of them.   But, Eternity is designed to help you understand your time better, plan your time better, and adjust your habits.

Quickly and easily I set up a set of categories of tasks and within minutes I was tracking everything easily using my iPhone.   Some of the features I found most useful were:

  • Easy set up of tasks
  • Ability to “fill in the gaps” easily when you have some activities on the clock and others missing.
  • Amazing “instant” reporting, including graphs, that give you a feel for how your time is being spent.
  • The ability to “slide” in two directions with graphs to see how your time was spent today, yesterday, this week, or this month.  Amazingly simple and useful.

Within a week, I know am zeroing in on some time-wasters and realizing (as Druker knew so well) that what I thought I was spending time on isn’t really what I am spending time on at all!

If you are looking for an app to manage your billable hours, this isn’t it.   But, if you are thinking about your effectiveness, and trying to improve the way you work, Eternity is a useful and powerful tool.    If you are a gadget person like me, and need a bit of a “push” to start manging your time better, try Eternity.

The more things change…

October 19th, 2009
My new 13" MacBook Pro

My new 13" MacBook Pro

Apple understands consumers better than any other tech company.   While other companies change, tweak, adjust, and re-design on the outside, Apple redesigns on the inside.    With a Mac, you get a nicer paint job, stylish new grillework, and something that will impress your friends when you drive up in front of their house.    But, when you turn it on, everything is familiar.   You’re driving the moment you put the keys in the ignition.   But it’s faster and better on the inside.

Last week, I got a shiny new MacBook Pro.   Because it’s so familiar, I was using it right away.   Apple’s innovative approach to set up using Time Machine backups mean that your new computer has everything your old one did before you even log in!   Essentially, there is hardly any setup or configuration or hardly any thinking to do.   Yet, every day I discover things.   Better battery life, faster processing, better bluetooth behavior.   I didn’t have to learn about them, read the manual, or even delay my work.   So, instead of mastering a new machine, I have a sexy new MacBook and keep smiling as I discover new things about it.

Our house is filled with computers we’ve owned in the past.   I did a little walkaround today and looked at my old Compaq laptop, Grace’s old HP, my old Toshiba.   They all look so foreign in their design, and all look so different.   Plugs, sockets, connectors… they are all in different places with different symbols.  It really makes me appreciate our switch to Apple four years ago.

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