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  1. Added Mar 17, 2008 by lmiles and 1 other
    "Merlin Mann’s family of websites about stuff like personal productivity, life hacks, and simple ways to make your life a little better."
  2. Added Jan 17, 2008 by aseldow
    At its most basic level, webapp Jott is a voice to text transcription service: you call Jott, leave a message, and Jott transcribes it and emails you or your contacts the text. That alone can capture the big idea that pops into your head on the drive to the office, but Jott can do a whole lot more than send you email. With Jott?s built-in links and tools that capitalize on its email-sending abilit
  3. Added Aug 20, 2007 by pham
    Humans can be surprisingly bad at making logical choices, especially when decisions involve too many factors for our puny brains to comprehend at once. The process of making a big, hard decision can involve lots of teeth-gnashing, gazing off into space, fear of regret and visions of the worst case scenario. But it doesn't have to be that way.
  4. Added Aug 03, 2007 by xiuli
    tags:
  5. Added Aug 03, 2007 by xiuli
    GTD
    tags:
  6. Added Jun 25, 2007 by aseldow and 6 others
    When I was in college most of the tools in this round up didn't exist. It was truly the dark ages of education! Well, okay, it was a just a few years ago, but just in this decade, and especially in the last few years, a handful of tools to make school life easier have appeared. What follows is the set of web tools I would put in my backpack were I headed back to school tomorrow.
  7. Added Nov 17, 2006 by pham and 1 other
    Oh, you're not familiar with TiddlyWiki? I don't believe I've spoken of it before, but it has changed the way I work on a daily basis. Again, the application is called TiddlyWiki, and it is a fully customizable electronic notebook, editted in a web browser (e.g. Firefox).
  8. Added Sep 19, 2006 by pham and 1 other
    Tracks is a web-based application to help you implement David Allen’s Getting Things Done™ methodology. It was built using Ruby on Rails, and comes with a built-in webserver (WEBrick), so that you can run it on your own computer if you like. It can be run on any platform on which Ruby can be installed, including Mac OS X, Windows XP and Linux. Tracks is Open Source, free and licensed under the GNU GPL.
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