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Splitting your trusted system
jason.mcbrayer | Sep 28 2006
I've just gone from being self-employed to a regular full-time job. Lots of culture shock, of course, but the thing that is really stumping me is this. When I was self-employed, I kept all my projects, contexts, and actions in one trusted system --- Emacs Org-mode. This worked really well, and I was able to keep a full view of all the commitments in my life in front of me. My problem is that now I feel the need to split my system between work and everything else (home, hobbies, volunteering), because my computer at work, and everything on it, is the property of my employer and subject to monitoring, seizure, backups, folding, spindling, mutilating, etc. I have set up a work GTD system using Org mode as well (previously Monkey-GTD, but it didn't meet all of my needs). This system works well for tracking my work needs, but because I am at home so little (relatively speaking) now, I find that I do not check and update my home GTD system frequently enough to keep on top of my non-work commitments. Obviously, one needs only one trusted system, not a collection of them, which is my problem. I'm sure I'm not the only one with this problem. How do other people deal with having to split their trusted system? 14 Comments
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How about setting up a...Submitted by jason.mcbrayer on October 6, 2006 - 11:40am.
dacoffey;6219 wrote:
How about setting up a screen session running your emacs gtd system, and then ssh into it from work? I can, and sometimes do, do this. In practise, it seems like it doesn't seem to help me that much, because I don't check it (perhaps because there's not much on it I can or should do from work). It may be that I'm just running into the problem now that GTD Is Not A Motivational System. Cacheing my Emacs-based system to index cards seems to be helping a little, possibly just because of the novelty. » POSTED IN:
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