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Stikkit: Magic words, functional emails, and a handy cheat sheet
Merlin Mann | Feb 7 2007
(Disclosure: I’m a proud member of Stikkit’s advisory board) As promised, I wanted to start sharing some of the reasons I’ve been digging Stikkit, so I thought I’d begin at the beginning: Stikkit’s use of “magic words” to do stuff based on your typing natural (albeit geeky) language into a blank note. There's a lot more to Stikkit than magic words, but this is a great place to start. (And, yeah, future posts will be more about how to implement stuff with Stikkit, but it's worthwhile to start with the mechanics.) [Note: this is one of those posts that you might want to print out] So let’s say I want to schedule lunch with my old roommate, Jake, during a notional trip to Sarasota later this week. I might create a new blank stikkit then add the following contents:
Ok, first — and as usual with my infamously over-the-top demos — there’s a lot more going on here than is strictly necessary (e.g., I could have just typed “ After the cut are a couple more detailed pics, followed by an explanation of what’s happening in my example, as well as an Unofficial Stikkit Cheat Sheet. So where ’s the magic here? Well, roughly in order of appearance...
So Stikkit seems pretty smart in its own way. Once you and Stikkit get good at talking with each other, it's generally smooth sailing. Now let's go back and have a look at the email that my pal, Jake, will get out of this:
A few things to note.
I realize this is a lot to digest, and you may want to just jump in and play with this for yourself. If so, it helps a lot to have a copy of the basic "magic words" in Stikkit (provided below). I also highly recommend visiting the Stikkit forums, where Michael Buffington maintains a terrific collection of tutorials and screencasts, and where many like-minded Stikkiteers participate actively in discussions, sharing hacks, and so on. # Stikkit Cheat SheetBoosted directly from the Stikkit Help window.
As you can see, there's a lot going on in Stikkit, so this will most likely evolve into a regular feature here. I'm planning posts that'll show you how to use Stikkit as your calendar and appointment maker, as a meeting notes app + light project management tool, as well as how you can set Stikkit up as a basic GTD-like personal producivity system. N.B.: Comments for the post are open, but I have to warn you in advance that I'm not exactly a Level 3 support stud (and, believe me, you will have a lot of questions about how Stikkit works). The forums are much better staffed for troubleshooting, getting help, and hosting clever remarks on server uptime. Still, I'm happy to talk about the example above and field any questions that I'm qualified to answer. (Disclosure reminder: I’m a proud member of Stikkit’s advisory board) 40 Comments
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Hi guys - I thought...Submitted by Michael Buffington (not verified) on February 7, 2007 - 7:45pm.
Hi guys - I thought I'd jump in and answer a few questions and comments (thanks for all the tips and ideas as well - totally great to see): Raymond - I think to some degree you're right - perhaps a lot of the power of Stikkit will at first be lost on normal, non-techie types, but we know that non-techie types are beginning to get the concept and really begin to run with it. If you're a hardcore tech, then yeah, you might think of clever ways to do similar things in emacs. Stikkit allows you to get has hardcore as you want, or it allows you to be effective only using a tiny bit of what it's capable of. Ted - I'm not quite sure it's a problem if people are, as you say, "wasting the power of Stikkit". If you only use it to book your lunch appointments, and for you, it's the best tool out there to book your lunch appointments, I consider that success. If 100% of what you know about the application handles 100% of what you would use it for anyway, it's probably a perfect fit. It'd be neat if everyone used all the features, because I think it makes for a great organization pocket knife, but it's certainly not a waste if they don't. Regarding "context" and "non-contexts", we have a feature we call salutations that you might be interested in. If you precede a paragraph with a salutation (like so: "stikkit, today is my birthday"), stikkit only pays attention to that paragraph, or any other paragraphs that also have salutations. This is particularly useful when using email with Stikkit. And yes, every Stikkit account has it's own special email address that you can send email to to create Stikkits. Stikkits themselves also get their own email address. CyberZombie: We are very interested in making it friendly to the GTD crowd. We have a dedicated GTD forum (just created today), and I'm certain we'll let some of the best suggestions made there trickle into the application at some point. » POSTED IN:
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